(Milwaukee) The Milwaukee International Short Film Festival, named "Best Local Festival" by Moviemaker Magazine concludes 24 years! The longest running film festival that honors local film-making returned to in-person events on September 10th at our new venue, the Avalon Theater. A whopping 34 films screened on that day, and at the end of the night we announced the winning films selected by our judges, accomplished filmmaker, Eseoghene Obrimah, actress, producer and model, Andrea Ivy, curator and art historian, Annemarie Sawkins, visual effects artist, Jeff Olm, former Fox 6 reporter, Jeremy Ross, award winning filmmaker, Immanuel Baldwin and educator and filmmaker, Theophilus Jamal.
MSFF
Saturday, September 10, 2022
24th Annual MKE INT Short Film Fest winning films
The MKE INT Short Film will return in 2023 for our history making 25th year on Sept 8th! And we are going back to being a two day event! The call for entries has begun and the early bird deadline is January 20th. Our link to submit your film is https://filmfreeway.com/ MilwaukeeShortFilmFestival
Tuesday, August 2, 2022
Advanced Tickets now on sale
Purchase Tickets:
To buy advance tickets you have to go to the website of the Avalon theater. And scroll down to near the bottom of the page. The Avalon will be handling all ticketing for the festival.avalonmke.com/
There are three blocks of programs. Voices Heard, Juried Part 1 and Juried Part 2. Please be sure that your friends and family know the program block that your film is in. The Avalon did list the films for each block, but the type is a bit small and some might not see it.
Also, please be sure to tell them that the Avalon has a strict policy on refunds and exchanges.
TICKET REFUNDS AND EXCHANGES - The Avalon Theater/Neighborhood Theater Group Refund Policy.
Tickets are valid only for the film, theater, showtime and date specified. Refunds and exchanges are available in person at the theater for which the ticket was purchased before the showtime and date on that ticket.
TICKET REFUNDS AND EXCHANGES - The Avalon Theater/Neighborhood Theater Group Refund Policy.
Tickets are valid only for the film, theater, showtime and date specified. Refunds and exchanges are available in person at the theater for which the ticket was purchased before the showtime and date on that ticket.
Purchases made online can additionally be refunded and exchanged in person before the showtime and date on the ticket. Refunds will not be provided after the showtime and date specified on the ticket.
We are suggesting everyone to arrive up to 30 minutes earlier. Our shows have sold out in the past and you want to be sure that you can sit with your group.
Prices:
The Avalon has priced the tickets at a reasonable $11.00, a price lower than the average ticket price in the city. But if you purchase a ticket online there is a surcharge of $1.00.
Parking:
The Avalon does not have their own parking space. It is all street parking. Please come early. Again, we are suggesting everyone to arrive up to 30 minutes earlier since our shows have sold out in the past.
Monday, July 18, 2022
Filmmaker Panel: WI Film Tax Incentives
The WI Film Tax Incentives always comes up when filmmakers get together. We once had them, but then we lost them. What happened?
Moderator, Michael Viers (The Shame List Picture Show) talks with Melissa Musante, Jeff Olm and Jon Kline about the history of the WI Film Tax Incentives, and what can be done to bring them back, or can they be brought back? This will be up for free before and during festival weekend below the bios, and on our youtube channel.
Pace-setter Honorees: Melody Herr and Kristin Holodak
The Milwaukee Independent Film Society (MIFS) established the Pace-setter Award thirteen years ago to bestow upon persons that are dedicated to advancing filmmaking in Wisconsin.
Buy tickets here
Melody Herr – BIO
Currently, an adjunct professor at Marquette University, Melody Herr holds an MFA in Writing for Film and TV from Emerson College. She’s known to say, “If you’ve seen the movie 8 Mile, then you know my life – minus the rapping.” Growing up three blocks north of Detroit’s famous dividing line meant she had to be as industrious as the factory next door. Both hardworking and adventurous, she fled Detroit and spent years living and traveling around the world with her growing family. Now she escapes through her passion for telling universal, female-driven stories that connect on an emotional level. Infusing heart and levity into her work balances out the heavy themes that she often explores.
Having projects place in several contests in recent years, Xed Out, her latest produced short, won Best Drama at the London Indie Short Film Festival in 2021, along with awards from Toronto, Vancouver, and other festivals around the world. She recently produced DIFFRACTION, a feature film written and directed by Kris Holodak, which is currently in post-production.
Saturday, July 9, 2022
2022 Voices Heard Judge: Andrea Ivy
Andrea Ivy is an actress and model based in the Midwest working in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois. She has been in various commercials, stage productions and films, most recently she co-wrote and produced the short film, Epiphany which was seen in last year's festival.
Up next, she is co-producing with Anieya Walker and starring in a feature film shooting in late summer.
Friday, July 8, 2022
2022 Judge: Eseoghene Obrimah
FIRST AND FOREMOST, I AM A STORYTELLER.
But, more specifically, I’m a writer and producer committed to telling stories that imagine what freedom looks like. My experiences as an international student in the United States and as an advocate for Black students and survivors of sexual assault inform my choices as a filmmaker. I focus on stories that analyze social issues primarily within the genres of fantasy, magical realism and africanfuturism.
My short film, 35, a social thriller about the short life expectancy of Black trans women, won the Best of Festival Student Award at the Dayton Independent Film Festival and the North Dakota Human Rights Film Festival. In 2019, I received the Movie Magic Producer Award and, in 2020, I was awarded the Alfred P. Weisman Award and the RedBull Arts Microgrant. In 2021, I was selected to participate in that year’s Full Spectrum Features’ Chicago Independent Producers Lab.
I have experience working with production teams on projects ranging from international brand commercials to small scale short films in Nigeria and in the United States. I also have experience developing marketing strategy, copywriting and creating content for companies, non-profits and brands.
I have had my writing published in the Campus Speaks Magazine and in Anti-Black Racism and Epistemic Violence by Dr. Kyra Shahid.
I am currently based in Lagos, Nigeria.
But, more specifically, I’m a writer and producer committed to telling stories that imagine what freedom looks like. My experiences as an international student in the United States and as an advocate for Black students and survivors of sexual assault inform my choices as a filmmaker. I focus on stories that analyze social issues primarily within the genres of fantasy, magical realism and africanfuturism.
My short film, 35, a social thriller about the short life expectancy of Black trans women, won the Best of Festival Student Award at the Dayton Independent Film Festival and the North Dakota Human Rights Film Festival. In 2019, I received the Movie Magic Producer Award and, in 2020, I was awarded the Alfred P. Weisman Award and the RedBull Arts Microgrant. In 2021, I was selected to participate in that year’s Full Spectrum Features’ Chicago Independent Producers Lab.
I have experience working with production teams on projects ranging from international brand commercials to small scale short films in Nigeria and in the United States. I also have experience developing marketing strategy, copywriting and creating content for companies, non-profits and brands.
I have had my writing published in the Campus Speaks Magazine and in Anti-Black Racism and Epistemic Violence by Dr. Kyra Shahid.
I am currently based in Lagos, Nigeria.
Saturday, June 25, 2022
2022 Judge: Annemarie Sawkins
Annemarie Sawkins is a Milwaukee-based-curator, art historian, and recent co-author of A Creative Place: The History of Wisconsin Art (2021). She has curated several exhibitions for the Charles Allis and Villa Terrace Art Museums including Afghan War Rugs: The Modern Art of Central Asia (2014), and More on Less: The History of Burlesque in America from Lydia Thompson to Amber Ray (2015).
Her exhibitions which often include videos have traveled to museums across the United States. In addition to being a former juror of the Milwaukee Short Film Festival, Annemarie has been a foreign extra in Japan and in movie shorts produced by Jeff Fitzsimmons and Karen Lindholm-Rynkiewicz.
Thursday, June 23, 2022
2022 Judge: Jeff Olm
Jeff has been on the cutting edge of multimedia, VR/AR, television, theatrical and electronic presentation technology creating Academy award nominated and award winning movies like Titanic, the Fifth Element, Minority Report, Armageddon, Mighty Joe Young, Spiderman, Harry Potter, Avengers, Terminator, and The Revenant.
Jeff has been working and involved doing research in User Interphases for Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality as well as researching retail Virtual and Augmented reality retail and shopping experiences.
Working in Cinematic Virtual Reality experiences the past 3 years Jeff directed Warbird Veterans, and Fireworks in Virtual Reality, And was part of the creative, production and post production teams for Disney, Paul McCartney, The National Football League, National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball. He has been in supervisory roles for Dreamworks, Disney, Sony Imageworks, Warner Bros. Universal and New Line.
Jeff has been working and involved doing research in User Interphases for Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality as well as researching retail Virtual and Augmented reality retail and shopping experiences.
Working in Cinematic Virtual Reality experiences the past 3 years Jeff directed Warbird Veterans, and Fireworks in Virtual Reality, And was part of the creative, production and post production teams for Disney, Paul McCartney, The National Football League, National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball. He has been in supervisory roles for Dreamworks, Disney, Sony Imageworks, Warner Bros. Universal and New Line.
2022 Judge: Jeremy Ross
Ross has worked in Lansing, MI, Milwaukee, WI and Chicago, IL and his work was seen across CBS, NBC, ABC, FOX, Yahoo, MSN, CBS/AP Radio Network.
Ross graduated from the University of Michigan and received his master’s in journalism from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. He’s since taught Multi-Media Storytelling at Northwestern as an Adjunct Professor and runs JRoss Communications a content creation business focused on video storytelling.
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
2022 Voices Heard Judge: Immanuel Baldwin
Immanuel Baldwin is an award-winning storyteller, coffee lover and tech enthusiast whose always had a proclivity to create things for people to experience. He’s held many roles on various production teams and has a deep-rooted love for the art of filmmaking. Currently Immanuel resides in Milwaukee and is a digital content creator for an advertising agency. He is very excited to be a part of this year's film festival.
2022 Voices Heard Judge: Theophilus Jamal
Theophilus Jamal is a Filmmaker/ Visual Raconteur whose work is informed by life's "complex
simplicity”. He is a 2015 DVID Fellow with Kartemquin Films, has developed instructional
programs at The Boys & Girls Club of Lake County and Waukegan Public Schools, and has
managed for several prestigious film festivals (Sundance, SXSW, CIMMfest, Chicago
International Film Festival). He is currently an Instructional Designer at Driehaus College of
Business at DePaul University and can be found performing stand-up comedy across Northern
Illinois under his stage name Theo Chicago.
simplicity”. He is a 2015 DVID Fellow with Kartemquin Films, has developed instructional
programs at The Boys & Girls Club of Lake County and Waukegan Public Schools, and has
managed for several prestigious film festivals (Sundance, SXSW, CIMMfest, Chicago
International Film Festival). He is currently an Instructional Designer at Driehaus College of
Business at DePaul University and can be found performing stand-up comedy across Northern
Illinois under his stage name Theo Chicago.
2022 Films: Phoenix 2021/A Survival Guide
Phoenix 2021/A Survival Guide by Stilvi Psilopoulou
Athens, Greece(Milwaukee Premiere)
Phoenix 2021/A Survival Guide revolves around depression and the struggle that a great deal of people undergo every single day in order to fight against it. The film identifies as the root of the problem the social taboos which entrap us into small boxes in which we all suffocate. The main character works at a very toxic environment that has nothing to do with what she wanted to be as a little girl. This leads her to antidepressants and the decision to put an end to her life. Will hope prevail in the end or it's too late?
Stilvi Psilopoulou is a distinguished actress received her Bachelor’s degree in Acting in 2014 from one of the top Drama Schools in Athens, Greece, the Mary Vogiatzi-Traga Drama School while being already a holder of another Bachelor’s degree in English Language and Literature from the very well-known institution The Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.
Stilvi Psilopoulou has been working as an actor for almost a decade with some of the very best Greek actors like Elisavet Konstantinidou, Ilias Logothetis, Alexandros Stavrou, Katerina Didaskalou, Nikitas Tsakiroglou and more. She has also worked with the most prominent Greek directors like Dimitris Arvanitis, Yorgos Oikonomidis, Panos Aggelopoulos and more.
In the years 2006-2009, Stilvi Psilopoulou has been the lead in many theater productions in Thessaloniki. Later on, she moved to Athens where in 2011 she took part in the very well-known TV series Stolen Dreams. In 2014 she started expanding her creativity directing this time herself A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the participation of the students of Mavrommati School.
In 2016, she was the first to translate the British play Yard Gal in Greek in which she also starred and was the line producer. Under the direction of Alexandros Stavrou Yard Gal became a great success. One year later, she wrote, produced and starred in the short film Black Boxed which was nominated by the Female Filmmakers Festival in L.A. and awarded with special honors by the Artfools Eco-Fashion Film Festival in Greece. Black Boxed is what she calls her feminist manifesto. She has also taken part in other short films as well.
In 2017, she took part in The Saviors Of God-Spiritual Exercises which was staged at Odeon Of Herodes Atticus. The following year she starred in Prisoners at Vault Theater and a few months later she also starred in What Are You Doing There? which was staged at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, in London.
In 2020, she starred in Ciao Italia film and she also took part in Balland for a Pierced Heart.
Athens, Greece(Milwaukee Premiere)
Running Time: 9 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama
Director Bio:
Stilvi Psilopoulou has been working as an actor for almost a decade with some of the very best Greek actors like Elisavet Konstantinidou, Ilias Logothetis, Alexandros Stavrou, Katerina Didaskalou, Nikitas Tsakiroglou and more. She has also worked with the most prominent Greek directors like Dimitris Arvanitis, Yorgos Oikonomidis, Panos Aggelopoulos and more.
In the years 2006-2009, Stilvi Psilopoulou has been the lead in many theater productions in Thessaloniki. Later on, she moved to Athens where in 2011 she took part in the very well-known TV series Stolen Dreams. In 2014 she started expanding her creativity directing this time herself A Midsummer Night’s Dream with the participation of the students of Mavrommati School.
In 2016, she was the first to translate the British play Yard Gal in Greek in which she also starred and was the line producer. Under the direction of Alexandros Stavrou Yard Gal became a great success. One year later, she wrote, produced and starred in the short film Black Boxed which was nominated by the Female Filmmakers Festival in L.A. and awarded with special honors by the Artfools Eco-Fashion Film Festival in Greece. Black Boxed is what she calls her feminist manifesto. She has also taken part in other short films as well.
In 2017, she took part in The Saviors Of God-Spiritual Exercises which was staged at Odeon Of Herodes Atticus. The following year she starred in Prisoners at Vault Theater and a few months later she also starred in What Are You Doing There? which was staged at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, in London.
In 2020, she starred in Ciao Italia film and she also took part in Balland for a Pierced Heart.
2022 Films: Niagara Falls
Niagara Falls by Tara Sickmeier & Victor Bellomo
Palo Alto, CA (Milwaukee Premiere)
At the edge of her life, a woman must confront a cascade of hopes, desires and fallen dreams.
Tara Sickmeier is a Tony Award-nominated Broadway producer, film/TV producer, and entrepreneur. In 2013, Sickmeier co-founded HIPZEE with Rob Baunoch III, a Brooklyn-born entertainment company that specializes in edgy, boundary-pushing storytelling for stage and screen.
Victor Bellomo is an American filmmaker, animator, singer-songwriter and composer. He sings the song for the soundtrack of Niagara Falls. He has received numerous awards and accolades for his films.
Alfred Hitchcock said, "When we tell a story in cinema, we should resort to dialogue only when it's impossible to do otherwise.”
Niagara Falls tells the story of a woman's quiet struggle to remain in life. The aim was to make a silent film linked to a song.
The lyrics say: "Ten thousand people in barrels, every day go over this thing, mostly in quiet obscurity, it’s of these people I sing."
This of course could be any of us. The song references to the historic rides people made in barrels over Niagara Falls in the early 1900's.
The woman enters a hotel room carrying a letter and a rose. This room is not a "hotel room” per se; we soon see that this room is her sanctuary, her shrine, her safe house. When she enters we immediately see that this place is special to her. She has been here many times before and enters with a ritual befitting a sacred place. She places the rose in a vase of wilted flowers. We soon get the sense that this room contains parts of her soul embodied in letters and objects that she has kept hidden from the world and perhaps to some large degree, from herself.
The letter she finally reads shatters the fragile stability of her world. She rips up the letter and proceeds to destroy the hidden contents of the room, revealing countless falling letters, postcards, photos and precious objects. In the end her space is littered with torn words and keepsakes. At the edge of her life, she must confront this cascade of hopes, desires and fallen dreams.
"At the bottom where water meets water, where each one’s ride is done, some slink off in the underbrush, some dry off in the sun."
Hitchcock's emphasis on telling a story through image and music, rather than dialogue, echoes the marriage of the visual and music narrative of our film.
Running Time: 5 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama
At the edge of her life, a woman must confront a cascade of hopes, desires and fallen dreams.
Director Bio:
Victor Bellomo is an American filmmaker, animator, singer-songwriter and composer. He sings the song for the soundtrack of Niagara Falls. He has received numerous awards and accolades for his films.
Director Statement
Niagara Falls tells the story of a woman's quiet struggle to remain in life. The aim was to make a silent film linked to a song.
The lyrics say: "Ten thousand people in barrels, every day go over this thing, mostly in quiet obscurity, it’s of these people I sing."
This of course could be any of us. The song references to the historic rides people made in barrels over Niagara Falls in the early 1900's.
The woman enters a hotel room carrying a letter and a rose. This room is not a "hotel room” per se; we soon see that this room is her sanctuary, her shrine, her safe house. When she enters we immediately see that this place is special to her. She has been here many times before and enters with a ritual befitting a sacred place. She places the rose in a vase of wilted flowers. We soon get the sense that this room contains parts of her soul embodied in letters and objects that she has kept hidden from the world and perhaps to some large degree, from herself.
The letter she finally reads shatters the fragile stability of her world. She rips up the letter and proceeds to destroy the hidden contents of the room, revealing countless falling letters, postcards, photos and precious objects. In the end her space is littered with torn words and keepsakes. At the edge of her life, she must confront this cascade of hopes, desires and fallen dreams.
"At the bottom where water meets water, where each one’s ride is done, some slink off in the underbrush, some dry off in the sun."
Hitchcock's emphasis on telling a story through image and music, rather than dialogue, echoes the marriage of the visual and music narrative of our film.
2022 Films: Pandemia
Pandemia by Sam Sorenson
Verona, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
In early 2020, as the Covid-19 pandemic was beginning, a group of people in a waiting room come together to right a wrong.
Sam Sorenson is an award-winning filmmaker and TV veteran. He is a four-time Emmy Award winner, and has more than 20 Emmy nominations. He also won the prestigious National Edward R. Murrow award, and several Associated Press and Wisconsin Broadcasters Association awards. He is a two-time winner of the 48 Hour Film Project and his films have screened at Film Festivals across the country.
Sam travels around the country shooting documentary videos, narrative films, and brand messages.
Verona, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Running Time: 8 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama/ Thriller
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama/ Thriller
In early 2020, as the Covid-19 pandemic was beginning, a group of people in a waiting room come together to right a wrong.
Director Bio:
Sam travels around the country shooting documentary videos, narrative films, and brand messages.
2022 Films: Yungsnag
Yungsnag by Erin Hastings
Milwaukee, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Up and coming Milwaukee rapper, Sanjiv Chheda, AKA Yungsnag, details his life experiences and how that impacts his music.
This film was made in Milwaukee by those of us who live here.
Erin Hastings (Yungsnag) is a freelance filmmaker based out of Chicago and Milwaukee who loves anything and everything about film, so much in fact, that I am a film major at UW-Milwaukee.
My primary focus is video, but as time has gone on I've really enjoyed focusing more on photography. I've worked baptisms, birthdays, anniversaries, fundraisers, and other special events.
Running Time: 8 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama/ Documentary
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama/ Documentary
Up and coming Milwaukee rapper, Sanjiv Chheda, AKA Yungsnag, details his life experiences and how that impacts his music.
This film was made in Milwaukee by those of us who live here.
Director Bio:
My primary focus is video, but as time has gone on I've really enjoyed focusing more on photography. I've worked baptisms, birthdays, anniversaries, fundraisers, and other special events.
2022 Films: Unspoken
Unspoken by Joseph R Lefeber
Neenah, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
A young couple must learn to communicate after an accident leaves one of them deaf.
From an early age, loved movies. Jurassic Park wasn't the first film I had seen but I remember watching it in a theater and being in awe of the fact dinosaurs were brought back to life. Ever since then, film became a passion.
As I got older, I took that passion and began to learn filmmaking. I attended film school at the New York Film Academy and started making short films. My focus is on telling emotional stories that connect with audiences.
Director Statement
Unspoken was made for the Madison, WI 48 Hour Film Project. Despite only having 48 hours to write, shoot and edit the film, I wanted to tell an emotional story that focused on a relationship, communication and overcoming challenges.
Running Time: 10 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama
A young couple must learn to communicate after an accident leaves one of them deaf.
Director Bio:
As I got older, I took that passion and began to learn filmmaking. I attended film school at the New York Film Academy and started making short films. My focus is on telling emotional stories that connect with audiences.
Director Statement
Unspoken was made for the Madison, WI 48 Hour Film Project. Despite only having 48 hours to write, shoot and edit the film, I wanted to tell an emotional story that focused on a relationship, communication and overcoming challenges.
2022 Films: Blossom and the Decrepit Man
Blossom and the Decrepit Man by Tim Schwagel
Eau Claire, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Blossom wakes up in the forest tied to a tree, and something is ticking...
Tim Schwagel. I'm a filmmaker based in Eau Claire WI and I've loved movies ever since my dad took me to see "Dinosaur" when I was three years old. Eau Claire doesn't have a large film community, but it is strong and I feel lucky to be able to do what I love right in my home town.
Eau Claire, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Running Time: 3 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama/ Dark Comedy
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama/ Dark Comedy
Blossom wakes up in the forest tied to a tree, and something is ticking...
Director Bio:
Tim Schwagel. I'm a filmmaker based in Eau Claire WI and I've loved movies ever since my dad took me to see "Dinosaur" when I was three years old. Eau Claire doesn't have a large film community, but it is strong and I feel lucky to be able to do what I love right in my home town.
2022 Films: Undecided
Undecided by Betty Allen & Andy Woodward
Milwaukee, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Three women’s different perspectives on motherhood collide in a workplace bathroom while one waits to discover whether she is pregnant.
Betty Allen has a degree in film from UW-Milwaukee. Her Premiere projects are more organized than your house. She’s worked on projects for Sara Bareilles and Margaret Cho and doesn’t even brag about it. Betty is a full-time badass mom and fearless filmmaker.
Andy Woodward has a degree in Time-Based Media from the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design. A passionate editor and avid screenwriter, Andy dabbles in After Effects, woodworking and rebuilding their 1982 Yamaha motorcycle. An infinitely curious human being.
Running Time: 10 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama
Three women’s different perspectives on motherhood collide in a workplace bathroom while one waits to discover whether she is pregnant.
Director Bio:
Andy Woodward has a degree in Time-Based Media from the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design. A passionate editor and avid screenwriter, Andy dabbles in After Effects, woodworking and rebuilding their 1982 Yamaha motorcycle. An infinitely curious human being.
Director Statement
The writer and producer, Rosa SanMarchi, approached us out of the blue (digitally) to direct this film after a recommendation from a friend. Immediately after reading the script we knew it was something we wanted to work on. It was a thrilling experience to collaborate with someone new, who already had a vision for the film but was looking for other voices and opinions to bring it home. The collaborative spirit of our team really reflected what we were trying to convey on screen, that we are all better when we listen to one another.
The writer and producer, Rosa SanMarchi, approached us out of the blue (digitally) to direct this film after a recommendation from a friend. Immediately after reading the script we knew it was something we wanted to work on. It was a thrilling experience to collaborate with someone new, who already had a vision for the film but was looking for other voices and opinions to bring it home. The collaborative spirit of our team really reflected what we were trying to convey on screen, that we are all better when we listen to one another.
2022 Films: To Be Fair
To Be Fair by Cynthia Johnson
Madison, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Pegi Christiansen knows exactly how to end the contentious and increasingly dangerous election cycle for president of the U.S. It's called the National Popular Vote Compact, and this passionate performance artist needs just one minute to persuade you to support it.
Running Time: 9 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Documentary
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Documentary
Director Bio:
2022 Films: Pandemic Survival and Revival
Pandemic Survival and Revival by Catey Ott Thompson
CATEY OTT DANCE COLLECTIVE (CODC) is a MKE based professional company that embodies modern/contemporary technique, intriguing qualitative movement, and vulnerable yet fierce emotions. The choreography features realness in relationships and clear intention, all inside of an imaginative dimension. The company dancers often collaborate in the investigation of movement. CODC also embraces interactive relationships with composers and visual artists/set designers.
Milwaukee, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
This 9 minute film was taken and edited by videographer Christal Wagner and choreographed by Catey Ott Thompson in collaboration with the Catey Ott Dance Collective (CODC) dancers. This film is an imagistic and abstract manifestation of the emotional landscape through the Covid-19 pandemic. The underlying tones and movement investigations include managing and eventually overcoming feelings of isolation, separation, anxiety, petrification, being tethered, and monotony. The original sound score was composed specifically for CODC by Tim Nohe. The dynamic and expressive CODC dancers include Sarah Chomeau, Rebecca Johnson, and Natasha Posey. The choreography clearly highlights the dancers' strong modern technique, physical endurance, emotional expression, as well as their unique interpretations of the atmospheric movement scores created for this piece.
Running Time: 9 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Experimental/ Dance
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Experimental/ Dance
Director Bio:
Catey Ott Thompson (CODC director, choreographer, dancer in MKE) has spent 38 years dancing,15 of which included performing, choreographing, and teaching in NYC. Ott Thompson received a MFA and BFA in Dance from UWM. She studied ballet with Christine Wright in NYC for 10 years. Catey Ott Dance Collective started in Milwaukee in 2005. The collective has performed in NYC at Danspace Project at St, Mark’s Church, Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors, DNA, Solar One, Dance Conversations at the Flea, White Wave, WAX, Green Space, 92Y, BAX, Hatch at Muller/The Works, UWM, DanceNOW, Panetta Studio, Spoke the Hub, and Gowanus Arts Building. As a professional dancer in NYC (1995-2012,) she performed with Heidi Latsky Dance, Allyson Green Dance, Bill Young and Dancers, Soundance Repertory Company, Gotham Group Dance, Sean Curran Company, Chris Ferris, Molly Rabinowitz, Cora, Holly Twining, Carrie Ahern and a variety of others. She is currently working on her 24th self-production of her own choreography. She has performed with Milwaukee Opera Theater, Danceworks Performance Company, Wild Space, DanceCircus, and Milwaukee Dance Theatre in MKE. She currently teaches at Milwaukee Ballet and Marquette University.
Director Statement
Director Statement
CATEY OTT DANCE COLLECTIVE (CODC) is a MKE based professional company that embodies modern/contemporary technique, intriguing qualitative movement, and vulnerable yet fierce emotions. The choreography features realness in relationships and clear intention, all inside of an imaginative dimension. The company dancers often collaborate in the investigation of movement. CODC also embraces interactive relationships with composers and visual artists/set designers.
2022 Films: All Eyes On
All Eyes On by Mackenzie Walla
Director Statement
Walla's most recent piece, All Eyes On, is a 2D animation environment that brings forth the idea of some greater, unknown entity is always watching people partake in society, even in the private and intimate moments of their own home. These “entities” could be some unseen god, someone you walk past down the street, or even you, as the viewer.
Milwaukee, WI (Milwaukee Premiere)
Everywhere you go you are always being watched, even in the comfort and intimacy of your own home. You don’t know who exactly is watching. The whole world maybe? Some higher being? You can’t escape the watchful eye of nature. Are your eyes even your own?
Mackenzie Walla is an animator, digital illustrator, filmmaker and visual effects artist. She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Film, Video, Animation, and New Genres from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Her work takes everyday moments in human life and twists them into new perspectives and layers for her viewers to interpret and enjoy. Walla’s style typically involves saturated colored line work to compliment dark simplistic backgrounds. Her inspirations come from personal feelings and experiences and other art forms that deal with post-apocalyptic-like societies.
Running Time: 2 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Experimental/ Animation
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Experimental/ Animation
Director Bio:
Walla's most recent piece, All Eyes On, is a 2D animation environment that brings forth the idea of some greater, unknown entity is always watching people partake in society, even in the private and intimate moments of their own home. These “entities” could be some unseen god, someone you walk past down the street, or even you, as the viewer.
2022 Films: The Coronation
The Coronation by Emily Penick
Melbourne Beach, FL (Milwaukee Premiere)
In this wordless, experimental film, a powerful goddess meets her match.
Emily is a writer / director with a background in directing and choreographing stage plays.
In NYC, she has worked at Playwrights Horizons, 2nd Stage, New Dramatists, The Tank, and elsewhere, developing new works for both stage and film. Before Covid, Emily was also a member of Frost Productions, responsible for producing large-scale events like the MET Gala, Tonys red carpet, and film premieres.
In addition to her own projects, Emily assists Tony-award-winning director and MacAurthur Fellow, David Cromer.
Emily is passionate about creating community, fostering positive change, and sharing career-development resources with young artists. During her time as Literary & Artistic Manager at ACT – A Contemporary Theatre, Emily lead the charge to make the institution a Deaf-friendly space, managing artistic programming, inclusive casting, meaningful community partnerships, and capital improvements which included the implementation of closed captioning in both main stage spaces. Also at ACT, Emily founded and managed the Kenan Directing Fellowship, which generously supported emerging directors with mentorship and financial resources.
Through her efforts with RED STAGE, which she founded, Emily has produced the world premiere Worse Than Tigers, and commissioned emerging female playwrights. RED STAGE also shares funding and career development opportunities with artists across disciplines, through their resource library at redstage.org.
With over a decade of experience in clown, nouveau vaudeville, and physical theatre, Emily is passionate about stories which showcase either subtlety or overtly, the modern clown. Two of her upcoming short film projects, The Coronation and Cuffing Season, showcase such work.
As an educator, Emily has adjudicated new play festivals at universities, taught play submission workshops, taught graduate courses in directing, acting, and movement technique, and guest-directed and choreographed university productions.
Recent directing credits include AN ILIAD (Brick Monkey Theater Company), THE WOLVES (Bucknell University), CORIOLANUS: Fight Like a Bitch (Rebel Kat Productions), A Christmas Carol (ACT- A Contemporary Theatre), the world premiere of Worse Than Tigers (RED STAGE), Gregory Award-winning Romeo & Juliet (Seattle Immersive Theatre), Pilgrims (Forward Flux), Snowglobed (Playing in Progress) and Milwaukee Repertory Theater’s The Other Woman, Wandering and their world premiere of the devised play Pot of Gold. Emily has choreographed at Book-It Repertory Theatre (Slaughterhouse Five), CafĂ© Nordo (Don Nordo Del Midwest), ACT Theatre (A Christmas Carol), and for the UMO Ensemble's Resistance Cabaret - Resistance is Fertile!
Emily was born in California, raised in New Jersey, attended Bucknell University, and earned her MFA in Directing from Ohio University.
Melbourne Beach, FL (Milwaukee Premiere)
Running Time: 12 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Experimental/ Dance
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Experimental/ Dance
Director Bio:
Emily is a writer / director with a background in directing and choreographing stage plays.
In NYC, she has worked at Playwrights Horizons, 2nd Stage, New Dramatists, The Tank, and elsewhere, developing new works for both stage and film. Before Covid, Emily was also a member of Frost Productions, responsible for producing large-scale events like the MET Gala, Tonys red carpet, and film premieres.
In addition to her own projects, Emily assists Tony-award-winning director and MacAurthur Fellow, David Cromer.
Emily is passionate about creating community, fostering positive change, and sharing career-development resources with young artists. During her time as Literary & Artistic Manager at ACT – A Contemporary Theatre, Emily lead the charge to make the institution a Deaf-friendly space, managing artistic programming, inclusive casting, meaningful community partnerships, and capital improvements which included the implementation of closed captioning in both main stage spaces. Also at ACT, Emily founded and managed the Kenan Directing Fellowship, which generously supported emerging directors with mentorship and financial resources.
Through her efforts with RED STAGE, which she founded, Emily has produced the world premiere Worse Than Tigers, and commissioned emerging female playwrights. RED STAGE also shares funding and career development opportunities with artists across disciplines, through their resource library at redstage.org.
With over a decade of experience in clown, nouveau vaudeville, and physical theatre, Emily is passionate about stories which showcase either subtlety or overtly, the modern clown. Two of her upcoming short film projects, The Coronation and Cuffing Season, showcase such work.
As an educator, Emily has adjudicated new play festivals at universities, taught play submission workshops, taught graduate courses in directing, acting, and movement technique, and guest-directed and choreographed university productions.
Recent directing credits include AN ILIAD (Brick Monkey Theater Company), THE WOLVES (Bucknell University), CORIOLANUS: Fight Like a Bitch (Rebel Kat Productions), A Christmas Carol (ACT- A Contemporary Theatre), the world premiere of Worse Than Tigers (RED STAGE), Gregory Award-winning Romeo & Juliet (Seattle Immersive Theatre), Pilgrims (Forward Flux), Snowglobed (Playing in Progress) and Milwaukee Repertory Theater’s The Other Woman, Wandering and their world premiere of the devised play Pot of Gold. Emily has choreographed at Book-It Repertory Theatre (Slaughterhouse Five), CafĂ© Nordo (Don Nordo Del Midwest), ACT Theatre (A Christmas Carol), and for the UMO Ensemble's Resistance Cabaret - Resistance is Fertile!
Emily was born in California, raised in New Jersey, attended Bucknell University, and earned her MFA in Directing from Ohio University.
2022 Films: Mold of Malachi
Mold of Malachi by Mtume Gant
Director Statement
Mold of Malachi is my statement on a conversation that I am tired of having, the conversation around Black trauma. What I aim to relay to those viewing is to question who are these explorations Black trauma for? Are they for Black people at large? Or others? And who is benefitting from all this excessive displays of pain and suffering around Black bodies? Mold of Malachi is my most focused work to date and one I feel I am the clearest with in terms of intention. I hope it causes you to question this very industry we have and whats really behind this current interest in Black stories.
Hope the film speaks you all.
And one last thing, make sure to keeping watching until AFTER the credits.
New York, NY (Milwaukee Premiere)
Mtume Gant is a Director, Performer & Educator hailing from NYC. His career started on stage, screen & TV, most notably as a cast member of the HBO show Oz and one of the leads in the film CARLITOS WAY: RISE TO POWER, where he was featured in the role of "Reggie" next to Mario Van Peebles and Luis Guzman. He made his screen debut as Louis in the Sundance Award Winning Film HURRICANE STREETS. He then moved behind the camera with his film SPIT which went on to win over half a dozen awards (Best Short film at the Coney Island Film Festival) and screened at nearly two dozen festivals across the United States such as Aspen Shortsfest, Woodstock Film Festival and Cucalorus.
His second film WHITE FACE caused an uproar, a film that predicted Trumps America was seen ahead of its time and was one of the more controversial shorts out in the circuit of 2017. It went on to be programmed at few dozen film festivals as well.
Mold of Malachi is Mtume's latest work and he is poised to make his feature film Directing debut in 2022. Mtume is also an Assistant Professor of Film at Purchase College.
Running Time: 9 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 6:30PM
Drama
In the suburbs of America, a Black man’s morning jog nightmare exists as a game for others.
Director Bio:
Mtume Gant is a Director, Performer & Educator hailing from NYC. His career started on stage, screen & TV, most notably as a cast member of the HBO show Oz and one of the leads in the film CARLITOS WAY: RISE TO POWER, where he was featured in the role of "Reggie" next to Mario Van Peebles and Luis Guzman. He made his screen debut as Louis in the Sundance Award Winning Film HURRICANE STREETS. He then moved behind the camera with his film SPIT which went on to win over half a dozen awards (Best Short film at the Coney Island Film Festival) and screened at nearly two dozen festivals across the United States such as Aspen Shortsfest, Woodstock Film Festival and Cucalorus.
His second film WHITE FACE caused an uproar, a film that predicted Trumps America was seen ahead of its time and was one of the more controversial shorts out in the circuit of 2017. It went on to be programmed at few dozen film festivals as well.
Mold of Malachi is Mtume's latest work and he is poised to make his feature film Directing debut in 2022. Mtume is also an Assistant Professor of Film at Purchase College.
Mold of Malachi is my statement on a conversation that I am tired of having, the conversation around Black trauma. What I aim to relay to those viewing is to question who are these explorations Black trauma for? Are they for Black people at large? Or others? And who is benefitting from all this excessive displays of pain and suffering around Black bodies? Mold of Malachi is my most focused work to date and one I feel I am the clearest with in terms of intention. I hope it causes you to question this very industry we have and whats really behind this current interest in Black stories.
Hope the film speaks you all.
And one last thing, make sure to keeping watching until AFTER the credits.
2022 Films: Eureka
Eureka by Miida Chu
Toluca Lake, California (Milwaukee Premiere)
A young indentured Chinese prostitute must overcome her toxic dependency on the brothel madam on the eve of the 1885 anti-Chinese riot in Eureka, California.
Assigned male at birth in Suzhou, China, a culturally underrated city, Miida spent the last ten years in the States, attempting to destroy the identities she has inherited from the Chinese and the American influences. She studied philosophy at NYU and was accepted as a PhD student at UCLA. Her Dionysian side brought her to the MFA program at the American Film Institute.
She was one of the seven finalists of the 2014 National YoungArts Competition. Her shorts have been official selections at film festivals including the Los Angeles Film Festival, HollyShorts, Nashville Film Festival, Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival, EnergaCamerimage, etc. Her most recent short, Eureka, won Best Director at SENE Film Festival, and Outstanding Woman Filmmaker at Tallgrass Film Festival. She served on the program committee of Miami Film Festival in 2020 and 2021.
Miida is also an avid collaborator of theater. She did media design for Round Room Image’s experimental play “Surrounded”, which toured in Longmont, Chicago, and Winnipeg. She co-founded Lamplighter Productions with Jordan Sucher and developed an original play “How to Be a GoodPerson™”, which opened in New York City and toured in Pittsburgh.
Running Time: 15 minutes
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama/ Western
Screening Time: Saturday, Sept 10 at 9:15PM
Drama/ Western
Director Bio:
She was one of the seven finalists of the 2014 National YoungArts Competition. Her shorts have been official selections at film festivals including the Los Angeles Film Festival, HollyShorts, Nashville Film Festival, Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival, EnergaCamerimage, etc. Her most recent short, Eureka, won Best Director at SENE Film Festival, and Outstanding Woman Filmmaker at Tallgrass Film Festival. She served on the program committee of Miami Film Festival in 2020 and 2021.
Miida is also an avid collaborator of theater. She did media design for Round Room Image’s experimental play “Surrounded”, which toured in Longmont, Chicago, and Winnipeg. She co-founded Lamplighter Productions with Jordan Sucher and developed an original play “How to Be a GoodPerson™”, which opened in New York City and toured in Pittsburgh.
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