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THE WOMEN OF AFRICAN DESCENT FILM FESTIVAL HAPPENS TODAY (BK, NY) FREE

New York – May 5, 2012 (cinematiqmag.com)When I think of the Women of African Descent Film Festival, two poem comes to mind, “And Still I Rise” and “Phenomenal Women” both by Maya Angelou. Both poems distinctly describes the past, present and future of women of African Descent. It is inspiring and enlightening of what great power we have within. Take a moment out your day to watch and celebrate women in film. The one day festival takes place today, Saturday, May 5, 2012 (10 AM – 7 PM) at the Long Island University- Brooklyn Campus in the Spike Lee Screening Room. The festival is free of charge and open to the public of all colors, nationalities and gender. For details go to: http://www.brooklynartscouncil.org/documents/1954

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SCHEDULE

10am

Reel Works Teen Filmmaking Showcase

The Girl Behind the Screen

Director: Kai Whyte, Collaborative HS, 8 min.

Confessions of a 15 year-old girl who has stolen online identities for over four years and has finally decided to come clean.

Mentor: Leonard Yakir

 

Warriors

Director: Orlando Taylor, Benjamin Banneker Academy, 7 min.

A JV basketball coach witnesses the repetition of his dream through his players: to see his team playing at Madison Square Garden and winning the championship.

Mentor: Eric Lin

 

Demolished by Poetry

Director: Lesrine Whint, Arts & Media Prep, 4 min.

This is a story based on the emotions of fear and love, what people are afraid of and what they value. It questions everything, the good and the bad. It is created for those who relate to the mysteries of love but are not sure how to express themselves.

Mentor: Ann Husaini

 

Root of Friendship

Director: Iyuhna Callands, Fort Hamilton HS, 6 min.

This film is an ongoing personal journey about how one young woman handles the challenges of friendship. During this journey, she realizes that her friendships reflect the ups and downs of her complex family history.

Mentor: Alicia Stewart

 

Heart of a Business

Director: Jeffrey Joseph, Brooklyn Community Arts & Media HS, 10 min.

Small business owner Earlie Butler’s work means everything to him. His story is an insightful look into the ups and downs of the business of life.

Mentor: Rachel Clift

 

Minds in the Closet

Director: Justice Allen, Benjamin Banneker Academy, 9 min.

Justice Allen grew up in the predominantly Caribbean neighborhood of East Flatbush. He noticed an overwhelming sense of homophobia in his community and journeyed to find out why.

Mentor: Yoruba Richen

 

Under The Pants

Director, Jaden Baird, Benjamin Banneker Academy, 9 min

A young conservative Brooklyn teenager ventures out to the streets of NYC to ask why his generation wears their pants so low.

Mentor: Yoni Brook

 

Simply Untitled

Director: Isaiah Reed, Brooklyn Prep, 8 min.

A young man recounts his battle with depression and self-cutting.

Mentor: Greg Poole

 

…What’s due me?

Director: Adrienne Williams, Benjamin Banneker Academy, 9 min.

A young woman interviews her family on their views regarding reparations.

Mentor: Ann Bennett

 

11:15

Q&A with Jackie Home

 

1pm

First Shorts Program

Love Me Through It

Writer, Sundi Lofty, Director. Robert Holly, Prod., Emmanuel Baptist Church, 2008, 41 mins.

Love Me Through It follows one woman’s journey toward overcoming the limitations of living with HIV/AIDS and the limitless love of God that helps her do it. The film has been used in partnership with the Balm in Gilead, a national HIV/AIDS advocacy organization, to promote dialogue about HIV and AIDS in churches and communities across the nation.

 

One People

Director, Al Santana, Producers, Laura L. Fowler/Al Santana, 30 mins.

Against the backdrop of a gentrified Harlem community, the story centers on two sisters who have opposite views about social responsibility and the role of artists. Aliyah, a self-styled revolutionary filmmaker, is producing a documentary about the 1960′s black power movement. Her sister, Valerie, is a poet whose work centers on themes of sensuality and love. They challenge each other on the purity of art and the need for art to inspire social change. Together, they discover a politicized Lorraine Hansberry.

 

2:25pm

Q&A: First Shorts Program

 

3pm

Second Shorts Program

Little Brother: Things Fall Apart

Directors/Producers, Nicole Franklin/Jasmin Tiggett, 18 mins.

Set in Camden, New Jersey, well-known as one of the nation’s most dangerous cities, the film takes a look at boys growing up amongst extreme violence, poverty and crime, and explores their feelings on love and relationships set against impossible odds. This is the filmmakers’ first installment in the groundbreaking Little Brother documentary series.

 

Taharuki (Suspense)

Director, Ekwa Msangi-Omari, 14 mins.

Set against the backdrop of the start of the devastating post-election violence that took place in Kenya in 2007/2008 and has left tens of thousands of Kenyans homeless, traumatized or dead, Taharuki(Suspense)is the fictional account of a man and woman from opposing ethnic tribes who’re working for an underground liberation movement to expose a child-trafficking cartel when something goes wrong, and they’re forced to make tough choices in order to stay alive and complete their mission. Time is running out, lives are at stake, and every second counts. What they choose could change the course of history.

 

White Sugar in a Black Pot

Director, Rachel I. Johnson, Producers, Rachel L. Johnson/Amanda Ross,18 mins.

White Sugar in a Black Pot is a family drama that showcases a diligent mother who is forced to make a tough decision that will affect not only her future but also her family. The film expresses her struggle to come to terms with her reality and emphasizes the love and strength that holds her family together.

 

Brooklyn Shakara

Director, Femi Agbayew, 21 mins.

Brooklyn Shakara takes a lighthearted look at what it means to marry well. Emeka Nwandu (played by HBO The Wire’s Gbenga Akinnagbe) thinks he has his “American Dream” all figured out. He is in line for a promotion and his girlfriend, Jumoke, has agreed to marry him. Everything is going perfectly until Jumoke’s father refuses to let her marry outside their tribe and Emeka’s boss puts a zany condition on the new promotion, a condition that will jeopardize the whole wedding if it does ever happen. As if these pressures weren’t enough, Emeka also has a big secret he’s been keeping from his bride to be.

 

4:15pm

Q&A: Second Shorts Program

Deconstructing Your Mother, Director, Ja’tovia Gary

 

4:45pm

Short & Feature Film Program

Deconstructing Your Mother

Director, Ja’tovia Gary, 15 mins.

Your mother is the first person you meet. For the majority of your life she is the primary nurturer. As a child we hold our mothers in high regard, often elevating them to icon status, as they are generally the most important person in our lives. My mother was always a central figure in my life. I saw her as a strong, almost superhuman figure that raised my brother and I after her marriage to my father ended when I was still a toddler. This film is about unraveling these childlike perceptions of our parents and seeing them as actualized human beings in order to better see ourselves.

 

In Our Heads About Our Hair

Director, Hemamset Angaza, 80 mins.

In Our Heads About Our Hair is a documentary that looks at “Black women’s issues” regarding hair and self-esteem, and advocates for the acceptance of all hairstyle choices.

6:20pm

Q&A: Short Program & Feature Film

 

ABOUT THE 11th ANNUAL WOMEN OF AFRICAN DESCENT FILM FESTIVAL

his day-long festival features short and feature-length films by independent filmmakers, college students, and youth filmmakers selected by a jury of peers and members of the Brooklyn Chapter of the Links. Criteria for selection include the filmmaker’s ability to depict the links that women of African descent have to their families and communities. The selected films tell stories of empowerment, sisterhood, leadership, and positive relationships. The Festival will also highlight films that reveal our shared past and celebrate that legacy.

 

ABOUT CINEMATIQ Magazine

CINEMATIQ is a quarterly magazine with a distinct perspective on Black images in films. It is dedicated to empowering Black filmmakers and bringing forth visibility in our own words. We aim to create a platform for all minds to be stimulated, helping to balance the world’s cinematic view.

Available in print and to your home or office exclusively at www.cinematiqmag.com .

MEET THE CAST & WRITER/DIRECTOR OF “GUN HILL ROAD”

[EXCLUSIVE video From Ron Simons, Executive Producer of
GUN HILL ROAD for CINEMATIQ Magazine]

“Following RON SIMONS@Sundance 2011″ continues with vblog #3: Meet the cast & writer/director Rashaad Ernesto Green of GUN HILL ROAD. Be sure to leave a comment. I’m sure the cast & crew would love to hear from you.

Ron Simons is name one of CINEMATIQ Magazine “TALENTED TEN PRODUCERS:of Independent Film to follow in 2011“ in the Premiere issue of CINEMATIQ Magazine. Winter Issue On Sale Now! (available in print only)

“GUN HILL ROAD”, THE NEW BRONX TALE GOT PICKED UP@Sundance 2011

Ron Simons, Executive Producer of GUN HILL ROAD | Name one of CINEMATIQ Magazine TALENTED TEN PRODUCERS to follow in 2011

(GUN HILL ROAD TRAILER)

LATEST NEWS: “Start-up distributor Motion Film Group has acquired the worldwide rights to Rashaad Ernesto Green’s debut feature “Gun Hill Road,” which is currently screening in competition at the Sundance Film Festival. A seven-figure deal will see “Road” hit theaters in early summer, 2011.” according to INDIEWIRE.http://ow.ly/3LCor

Congratulations to the cast and crew of GUN HILL ROAD for being picked up at Sundance 2011.
Rashaad Ernesto Green(writer/director)
Michelle-anne Small (Producer)
Ron Simons Name one of CINEMATIQ MagazineTALENTED TEN PRODUCERS:of Independent Film to follow in 2011
.

“Following RON SIMONS@Sundance 2011″ vblog #2 (via iphone)

[Following RON SIMONS@Sundance 2011 via iphone]

 

[vBLOG POST #2]

Welcome 2 | City Weather | Opening night reactions: Pariah | GUN HILL ROAD screens Mon 1/24

[CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO CINEMATIQ MAIN SITE]

 

 

Ron Simons is profiled in CINEMATIQ Magazine as one of the Talented Producers of Independent films to follow in 2011. He is also the producer of NIGHT CATCHES US directed by Tanya Hamilton starring Kerry Washington and Anthony Mackie (DVD release date Feb 1, 2011).  Subscribe to CINEMATIQ Magazine, a new quarterly publication with a distinct perspective in Black cinema !  Available in print only via www.cinematiqmag.com

[Following RON SIMONS@Sundance 2011 blog post #1]

[Following RON SIMONS@Sundance 2011 via iphone]

 

[vBLOG POST #1]

Welcome | Producers prep | Mon 1/24 Screening

[CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO CINEMATIQ MAIN SITE]

 

 

 


ABOUT Following RON SIMONS@Sundance 2011
Ron Simons, Executive Producer brings CINEMATIQ Magazine readers exclusive behind the scene footage of his journey shopping his new film GUN HILL ROAD at Sundance 2011.

ABOUT GUN HILL ROAD
011 Sundance World Premiere. GUN HILL ROAD is about a Latino family in the Bronx whose father returns home from prison to find his teenage son stumbling towards a sexual transformation that will put the bonds of their embattled family to the test.

Directed By: Rashaad Ernesto Green
Michelle-anne Small, Ron Simons

Starring: Esai Morales, Judy Reyes, Harmony Santana, Vincent Laresca, Franky G, Miriam Colon, Robin De Jesus, Felix Solis, Flaco Navaja, Tyrone Brown, Shirley Rumierk, Vanessa Aspillaga, Robert Prescott, Isiah Whitlock

ABOUT CINEMATIQ MAGAZINE (ON SALE NOW!)
Founded and created by Angel L. Brown, CINEMATIQ is a new quarterly film resource publication with a unique and distinct perspective in Black cinema and beyond from indie to mainstream. In each issue you will find interviews, commentary, movie & film equipment reviews and how-to pieces focusing on topics from development to distribution and more. Published by BROWN-ROSS Publishing

CINEMATIQ is pronounced Cine-matiC.The Q represents Quality, Quest, Quintessence, an example of our mission and what we bring to table every issue!

cineMatiqmag.com | fb /​cineMatiqMagazine | t @cinematiqmag

SCREENING SCHEDULE
Monday, January 24, 5:30 p.m.
Library Center Theatre, Park City

Tuesday, January 25, 12:15 p.m.
Eccles Theatre, Park City

Wednesday, January 26, 6:00 p.m.
Screening Room, Sundance Resort

Thursday, January 27, 2:30 p.m.
Prospector Square Theatre, Park City

Friday, January 28, 8:30 a.m.
Egyptian Theatre, Park City

Saturday, January 29, noon
Broadway Centre Cinema VI, SLC

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