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Offline davyjenny1

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TTFF spotlight
« on: August 27, 2009, 06:49:41 PM »
TT Film Festival begins next month

Thursday, August 27 2009
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A film about Geoffrey Holder and his wife, prima ballerina Carmen, will be in the TTFF spotlight....
A film about Geoffrey Holder and his wife, prima ballerina Carmen, will be in the TTFF spotlight....

THE 2009 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival (TTFF) will run from September 16-20. The theme, “You’re in Focus”, will take on some new initiatives, with Indian Cinema, Black British Cinema and Mexican Cinema and award winning feature films about the Caribbean by directors of the Caribbean which have been receiving international accolades.

This year a heritage element has been introduced to the TTFFl, which will focus on films from India, whose culture has influenced the Caribbean. Also on the agenda, is a showcase on the Black Filmmakers group (BFM), from London.

The popular People’s Choice Awards will also take on a new dimension, with cash prizes of $5000 to be won in the categories Best Dramatic Feature, Best Documentary Feature and Best Short Film. Additionally, there is a US$10,000 special jury prize for the best film that captures the Caribbean spirit, sponsored by the National Gas Company. The Trinidad and Tobago Film Company Award and $30,000 will go to the Best Locally Made Film.

This year, all films will get more airing time, as the TTFF has extended the number of screenings at UWI, in collaboration with UWI Film Programme, with two full days of screenings. MovieTowne in Tobago will host one full week of Festival films, StudioFilmClub moves up to four evenings, and late night screenings have been introduced at MovieTowne (Trinidad) for guest directors and festival favourites. Two films will launch this year’s gala opening ceremony at MovieTowne on September 15 – Rain and Queen of the Brands. There will also be a closing ceremony – a red carpet event, where the winners will be announced. The red carpet affair will feature on film the story of Geoffrey Holder’s life as a dancer with his wife, prima ballerina Carmen, in Carmen and Geoffrey.

Organisers are billing the closing gala as an evening of celebration and entertainment.
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« Last Edit: August 28, 2009, 07:48:08 PM by davyjenny1 »
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Offline Deeks

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Re: TTFF spotlight
« Reply #1 on: August 28, 2009, 03:27:31 PM »
The headline misleading. I saying, oh no!. Not Jack Warner again.

Offline WestCoast

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Re: TTFF spotlight
« Reply #2 on: August 28, 2009, 04:56:16 PM »
The headline misleading. I saying, oh no!. Not Jack Warner again.
same here
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Offline davyjenny1

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Re: TTFF spotlight
« Reply #3 on: September 07, 2009, 05:56:04 PM »
Guess who’s coming to the TT Film Festival?

By MARINA SALANDY-BROWN Monday, September 7 2009
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Guess who's coming to the TT Film Festival?...
Guess who's coming to the TT Film Festival?...
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FILMMAKING isn't just about directors, though some of them might like to think so. Yes, the director is often the sine qua non of a film, especially in independent, auteur-driven cinema. But that doesn't mean that the other people involved in making a film are inconsequential, or interchangeable. Even if a film is a director's personal vision, you still need other people to help bring that vision to life.

One such person is the cinematographer. The cinematographer – the director of photography, properly speaking – is responsible for a film's look, its visual style. And since film is a visual medium, that makes the cinematographer important; sometimes, almost as important as the director.

In a film like Steve McQueen's Hunger, one of the narrative features being screened at the Festival, the cinematography is key; the austere look of the film, with its bleached-out colours, complements and reinforces the stark subject matter. So it's no surprise we're thrilled that the cinematographer of Hunger, Sean Bobbitt, will be attending the Festival.

Not only will he be here for the film's screening, but he will also be conducting a workshop on the art of cinematography. (And if you're interested in cinematography, I suggest you sign up for the workshop now, before all the places are gone.)

Another person who's key to cinema, though not necessarily to the filmmaking process itself, is the critic. Now I know there are people who will quibble with this, and say that critics aren't really important, that they're just failed artists or know-nothings who only like to bad-talk everything. These people, however, are wrong, and I don't just say that because I am a critic myself. Robust critical discourse is key in the arts, in any culture — but that's another post entirely. Suffice it to say that the critic matters.

And we've got one of the best, Hilton Als of the New Yorker, coming to the Festival to programme the four nights of screenings at Studiofilmclub.

The films Als has chosen to screen are largely experimental, challenging the conventions of traditional filmmaking.

They should prove thought-provoking, conversation-inspiring viewing — come along to Studiofilmclub to see them and you may even find yourself in a conversation with Hilton Als.

Of course, you've got to have actors to portray the various roles in films (or in the case of biographical films, subjects to make films about).

Linda Atkinson and Nick Doob's documentary Carmen and Geoffrey is the story of New York-based dancers Carmen de Lavallade and her husband, Trinidad-born Geoffrey Holder.

Holder is larger than life — a striking six foot six, with a booming voice.

This dancer-painter-actor is an artistic renaissance man if there ever was one. And he'll be here, this renowned son of the soil, for a screening of Carmen and Geoffrey which takes place before the awards ceremony and reception that closes the Film Festival on September 29.

But ultimately, the members of the audience are the most important guests at the fourth trinidad+tobago film festival. Indeed, without people to watch them, there wouldn't be any films at all.

The Festival starts on September 16 and runs for two weeks at venues around the country.
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Offline weary1969

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Re: TTFF spotlight
« Reply #4 on: September 09, 2009, 12:26:43 PM »
Nah we doh cuss JW on this pg.
Today you're the dog, tomorrow you're the hydrant - so be good to others - it comes back!"

 

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