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 March 11, 2010
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Nashville Film Festival Announces
2010 Features Lineup


Highlights include 'Provinces of Night' Special Presentation; 'City of Borders,' 'Cleanflix' and 'Saturday Night' in Documentary Competition; 'Lourdes,' 'No Crossover: Allen Iverson On Trial' and 'The Red Baron' in World Cinema

 NASHVILLE, Tennessee - March 11, 2010 - The Southeast premiere of director Shane Dax Taylor's "Provinces of Night," starring Kris Kristofferson, Val Kilmer, Dwight Yoakam, Hilary Duff and Reece Thompson, is one of the highlights of the more than 70 feature films -- among them nine World Premieres -- that will screen at the 2010 Nashville Film Festival (NaFF) as part of either the Special Presentation, World Cinema, Graveyard, Retrospective or four competition categories. Together with short films, more than 220 films from more than 38 countries will screen at the Festival, which takes place April 15-22 at the Regal Green Hills Cinemas.

Provinces of Night Major films screening in the World Cinema category include directors Reed Cowan -- his film "The Other Side of Lens" World Premiered at NaFF 2009 -- and Steven Greenstreet's "8: The Mormon Proposition;" Catherine Breillat's "Blue Beard;" Yorgos Lanthimos's "Dogtooth;" David Morrissey's "Don't Worry About Me;" Ben Wheatley's "Down Terrace;" Joe O'Brien's "Endure;" Chico Colvard's "Family Affair;" Stanley Nelson's "Freedom Riders," Dagur Kári's "The Good Heart;" Luca Guadagnino's "I Am Love;" Jessica Hausner's "Lourdes;" Marco Berger's "Plan B; Mary Ann Smothers Bruni's "Quest for Honor;" Steve James's "No Crossover: Allen Iverson on Trial;" Nikolai Muellerschoen's "The Red Baron;" Katerina Cizek and Peter Wintonick's "Seeing is Believing;" Peter Liechti's "The Sound of Insects: Record of a Mummy;" and David Kaplan's "Today's Special."

James, in addition to bringing "No Crossover: Allen Iverson on Trial" to the Festival, will also present a retrospective screening of his groundbreaking documentary, "Hoop Dreams."

"I'm really excited about the number of films we have from the UK this year, in addition to Italy, France, Greece, Austria and more," said NaFF artistic director Brian Owens. "And to present a film from Iraqi Kurdistan in Nashville, which has the largest population of Kurds in the United States, is thrilling. Music film fans and documentary buffs will be extremely pleased with this year's selections, stretching over a wide swath of subjects and styles, including, for the first time, several sports-related films."

Joining the previously announced Narrative Competition and First-Time Filmmakers Competition, a dozen films each, including a few to still be confirmed, will compete in the Documentary Competition and Music City/Music Films Competition.

Titles screening in the Documentary Competition include Yun Suh's "City of Borders;" Andrew James and Joshua Ligair's "Cleanflix;" Michael Nash's "Climate Refugees;" Joshua Zeman's "Cropsey;" Ky Dickens's "Fish Out of Water;" Dean Hamer's "Out in the Silence;" Taggart Siegel's "Queen of the Sun;" Marshall Curry's "Racing Dreams;" James Franco's "Saturday Night;" Kathy Conkwright and Mary Makley's "Southern Belle;" Meerkat Media Collective's "Stages;" and Dirk Simon's "When the Dragon Swallowed the Sun."

Siegel's film, "The Real Dirt on Farmer John," was the NaFF 2005 winner of the REEL Current Award, presented by Al Gore to a documentary that provides extraordinary insight in a contemporary global issue.

Film's included in NaFF's popular Music Films/Music City Competition are Niall McKay's "The Bass Player (A Song for Dad);" Robert Patton-Spruill's "Do It Again;" Clark Stiles's "Don't Quit Your Daydream;" Jim Bigham's "For Once in My Life;" Ruth Somal's "James Blunt: Till You're Told to Stop;" Kenneth Bowser's "Phil Ochs: There But for Fortune," Steve Condon's "Radio On: The Shawn and Hobby Band Documentary;" Leanne Pooley's "The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls;" and Kathleen McNamara's "Why Isn't Chris von Sneidern Famous?"

Patron level memberships that include an All-Festival Pass, an invitation to the 2010 NaFF Patrons Party and priority seating at the Festival, can be purchased now at NashvilleFilmFestival.org. Individual tickets for the 2010 Nashville Film Festival will go on sale online in early April.

Media Credentials
Members of the media interested in attending the Festival and applying for media credentials should put their request in writing to Joe Pagetta, Media Relations Manager, at jpagetta@wnpt.net. Requests should include complete name, title, affiliation and contact info, intended type of coverage and expected publication or air date.

A comprehensive listing of confirmed feature films, along with a synopsis of each, follows. Panel and event information, and several additional film titles in competition, will be announced within the next two weeks.

Special Presentations


Provinces of Night (Shane Dax Taylor, USA)
Fleming Bloodworth (Reece Thomspon) is alone in the world. His mother abandoned him and his cuckolded father (Dwight Yoakam) is on a quest for vengeance. He has one uncle (W. Earl Brown) who exists at the edge of lunacy, another uncle (Val Kilmer) who escaped for the bright lights of Nashville, and a grandmother who is slipping into dementia. His only true companions are his books and dreams of being a writer. Then he meets two people who forever transform his world: Raven Lee Halfacre (Hilary Duff), the bastard daughter of a prostitute, and E.F. Bloodworth (Kris Kristofferson), the grandfather he has never known who left forty years ago and never looked back.  Set in Tennessee and based on the book by William Gay.  Music by T Bone Burnett.

Closing Night: TBA

World Cinema Today

8: The Mormon Proposition (Reed Cowan, Steven Greenstreet, USA)
"8: The Mormon Proposition" exposes the efforts of the Mormon Church and its members to halt nearly every piece of LGBT legislation on the desks of lawmakers from Hawaii to New York. Emmy-award winning journalist and documentary filmmaker Reed Cowan is a former Mormon, which, coupled with his OUT status as a gay man and father of two adopted sons has provided a compelling and at times shocking look at the Mormon way of doing business against LGBT people.

Blue Beard (Catherine Breillat, France)
In Catherine Breillat's retelling of this classic tale, two young sisters play together in the attic of their home in 1950s France. Catherine (a stand-in for Breillat, according to her autobiographical statement) torments her timid sibling Marie-Anne with repeated dramatic readings of Bluebeard. As she does, the 17th-century story plays out on screen. In this stylized and highly literary adaptation, Breillat perfectly captures the pleasures to be had both in being frightened and in facing one's fears head-on.

Dogtooth (Yorgos Lanthimos, Greece)
Three teenagers are confined to an isolated country estate that could very well be on another planet. The trio spend their days listening to endless homemade tapes that teach them a whole new vocabulary. Any word that comes from beyond their family abode is instantly assigned a new meaning. Hence 'the sea' refers to a large armchair and 'zombies' are little yellow flowers. Having invented a brother whom they claim to have ostracized for his disobedience, the uber-controlling parents terrorize their offspring into submission. The father is the only family member who can leave the manicured lawns of their self-inflicted exile, earning their keep by managing a nearby factory, while the only outsider allowed on the premises is his colleague Christina, who is paid to relieve the son of his male urges. Tired of these dutiful acts of carnality, Christina enlists the elder daughter for some girl-on-girl action, carelessly disturbing the domestic balance. Soon enough, sex has spread throughout the household like fire. Next stop: rebellion.

Don't Worry About Me (David Morrissey, UK)
David (James Brough) is a guy from London who has a one-night stand. Afterwards, David attempts an act of kindness that leaves him flat broke with no way to get home. David ends up at a dog track, and on the advice of a passer-by named Tina (Helen Elizabeth), he picks a dog that wins big. Over the course of the day these two strangers explore Liverpool, and find they have more in common than they imagined.

Down Terrace (Ben Wheatley, UK)
Bill and Karl, a father and son outfit, have just got out of jail free - but all is not well in Down Terrace - For Karl, life in Billworld has become intolerable and he's close to the edge, in fact, he's falling over it. A darkly comic and deeply disturbing slice of social surrealism featuring the cream of British comedy character actors, Down Terrace is the debut feature film from director Ben Wheatley.

Endure (Joe O'Brien, USA)
A young woman has been abducted, tortured and tied to a tree in the middle of an isolated swamp in central Florida. The only person who knows her location is dead. Veteran detective Emory Lane is called from the bedside of his ailing wife to unravel the mystery. Working with detective Zeth Arnold, the detectives uncover the secret life of the dead abductor and a startling revelation: they're not the only ones looking for the woman.

Family Affair (Chico Colvard, USA)
Like a scene torn from "The Color Purple" or "Capturing the Friedmans," this deeply personal and uncompromising documentary examines the complex levels of pedophilia and how it can manipulate and control an entire family for life. "Family Affair," is also a story about resilience, survival and understanding a child's capacity to accommodate a parent's past crimes in order to satisfy a basic longing for family.

Freedom Riders (Stanley Nelson, USA)
This is the story of more than four hundred Americans who participated in a bold and dangerous experiment designed to awaken the conscience of a complacent nation. These self-proclaimed, 'Freedom Riders' challenged the mores of a racially segregated society by performing a disarmingly simple act. Traveling together in small interracial groups, they sat where they pleased on buses and trains and demanded unrestricted access. In the end, they helped launch a civil rights revolution that literally changed America, and the world.

The Good Heart (Dagur Kári, Iceland)
Jacques (Brian Cox) is the crusty, misanthropic owner of a grungy dive located on an even grimier back street in New York. An epic chain smoker, he knows he has only a short time left. In the hospital after his fifth coronary, he meets the ultra-meek Lucas (Paul Dano), a homeless kid who has pretty much given up on life. Determined to keep his bar going, Jacques takes Lucas under his wing and schools him in the decidedly arcane rules he lives by.

I Am Love (Luca Guadagnino, Italy)
"I Am Love" moves through the cultivated world of a wealthy and distinguished industrial family. It is a film of ritual and order, centered on a massive Milanese mansion whose airy rooms convey the power and stature of the Recchi family. Servants glide up elegant staircases to serve dishes of gracefully prepared food to a family that has gathered to celebrate the birthday of its patriarch, the man who built this small empire.

Lourdes (Jessica Hausner, Austria)
Christine (Sylvie Testud) has spent most of her life confined to a wheelchair, and she looks for a solution to her condition in faith as well as medical science. She makes a pilgrimage to Lourdes, where a celebrated miracle is said to have occurred. After several days of treatment, Christine has regained the full use of her arms and legs. But once she's experienced the miracle she hoped for, Christine's interest is less in thanking the Lord and more in pursuing a man.

Plan B (Marco Berger, Argentina)
Bruno is dumped by his girlfriend; behind a calm, indifferent expression, his mind plans a cold, sweet vengeance. She, a modern girl, keeps on seeing him once in a while, but has another boyfriend, Pablo. Bruno becomes Pablo's friend, with the idea of eroding the couple, maybe introducing him to another woman. But, along the way, the possibility of a plan B arises, a more effective one, which will put his own sexuality into question.

Quest for Honor (Mary Ann Smothers Bruni, Iraqi Kurdistan)
A former teacher and tireless activist works with local lawmen, Kurdish government agencies and her colleagues to investigate and eradicate honor killings in the tribal regions of Kurdistan.

No Crossover: Allen Iverson on Trial (Steve James, USA)
On Valentine's Day 1993, 17-year-old Bethel High School basketball star Allen Iverson was bowling in Hampton, Va., with five high school friends. It became a night that defined Iverson's young life. A quarrel soon erupted into a brawl pitting Iverson's young black friends against a group of white patrons. The fallout from the fight and the handling of the subsequent trial landed the teenager-considered by some the nation's best high school athlete-in jail and sharply divided the city along racial lines.

The Red Baron (Nikolai Muellerschoen, Germany/ Czech Republic)
In Europe, 1916, German aerial combat pilot Baron Manfred von Richthofen is a legend in his own time, a hero at home and a man both feared and respected by the enemy, until the young pilot falls in love with a beautiful and resolute nurse who opens his eyes to his role in the propaganda machine of a senseless and barbarous war.

Seeing is Believing (Katerina Cizek, Peter Wintonick, USA/Rwanda)
Handicams aren't just for weddings and family vacations.What happens when amateur front-line advocates pick up camcorders to document what they see? What are the risks and responsibilities? And what are the wider impacts on television and audiences? On international law and society? On documentary practice? SEEING IS BELIEVING is an unprecedented exploration into the political and social uses of handicams and new communications technologies, and human rights activists, war crimes investigators, right-wing videographers and ordinary citizens are arming themselves with tools of the new visual revolution.

The Sound of Insects: Record of a Mummy (Peter Liechti, Switzerland)
A hunter in a remote and idyllic forest stumbles on a make shift tent fashioned from sheets of plastic and containing the mummified remains of a corpse. A detailed journal found on site reveals that the man committed suicide by self-imposed starvation. Who was this man? Why did he kill himself in such a manner? Inspired by this true event and by the novella 'Until I Am a Mummy' by Shimada Masahiko, Insects sensuously evokes the mysterious man's last days.

Today's Special (David Kaplan, USA)
American filmmaker David Kaplan's heart-warming tale is set in New York where Samir (Aasif Mandvi), is a top sous chef in an upmarket Manhattan restaurant, but is passed over for promotion because his cuisine lacks pizzazz. Upset, he resigns, and when his father gets suddenly ill, Samir has to look after their ailing, slummy Indian restaurant, when he can't even cook Indian food. Samir rediscovers his heritage and his passion for life through the enchanting art of cooking Indian food.

Narrative Competition

Applause (Martin Zandvliet, Denmark)
When the critically-acclaimed actress Thea Barfoed (Paprika Steen) ends her rehab, she confronts a hard choice. During her heavy drinking period, she divorced and lost custody of her two boys; now she wants them to be a part of her life again. Her ex-husband Christian is quickly softened by her tough, manipulative, but charming figure and agrees. She has to prove to herself and to him, but the hard life on stage, and the ghosts of the past slowly comes knocking on her door. (Southeast Premiere)

Art House ( Victor Fanucchi, USA)
When a dishonest college dean and a philistine donor try to evict a household of starving art students from their communal house in order to make a dormitory for varsity golf, the art students rise up and fight to preserve their home, known for decades as a hard-partying haven for artists and artist-wannabes. Led by Nora Ohr (GRETA GERWIG), the eccentric housemates must overcome aesthetic disputes and romantic train wrecks, putting their futures on the line for the cause. (World Premiere)

The Athlete (Atletu) (Davey Frankel, Rasselas Lakew, Ethiopia)
This unique and elegant hybrid of autobiography, biopic and documentary tells the inspiring story of the great Ethiopian marathon runner Abebe Bikila, who in 1960 became the first African athlete to win gold at the Olympics - a new world record. Bikila's story took a shocking turn after his numerous triumphs, yet nothing could keep him from pursuing his dreams all the way to the finish line, inspiring generations of Africans and others beyond. (Southeast Premiere)

Backyard (Carlos Carerra, Mexico)
The true story of the border town of Juarez, Mexico where since the mid-90's thousands of women have gone missing or turned up as sun-burnt corpses in the desert. Can new police captain Blanca Bravo (Ana de la Reguera) stop the savagery? (Tennessee Premiere)

The Be All and End All (Bruce Webb, United Kingdom)
Fifteen year olds Robbie and Ziggy think they'll be best friends forever but when Robbie collapses on holiday and is diagnosed with a fatal heart condition, forever suddenly seems a lot shorter. Lying in the children's ward, Robbie only has one thing on his mind: he doesn't want to die a virgin. And who has to overcome the odds and help him fulfill his final wish? His best friend Ziggy. (Southeast Premiere)

Beyond the Pole (David L. Williams, UK)
Beyond the Pole is a boys own adventure comedy, which follows two hapless friends as they set out on the first Carbon Neutral, Vegetarian, Organic expedition ever to attempt the North Pole. Funny and subversive it is the story of two men trying to find their place in the world before the end of the world. And it asks one question of us all: How far would you go to save the planet? (Tennessee Premiere)

Black, White, and Blues (Mario Van Peebles, USA)
Filmed in Nashville in 2009, Mario Van Peebles directed this drama of spiritual redemption against the backdrop of the Memphis blues starring Michael Clarke Duncan and Morgan Simpson. (World Premiere)

The Colonel's Bride (Brent Stewart, USA)
A fallen man and retired US Army Colonel, Bill (JD Parker) is an occasional commercial real-estate agent who spends most of his waking hours in the company of bourbon, cigarettes and a persistent cough. Attempting to make amends with a tattered past, he embraces a young, Vietnamese mail-order bride (Alicia Truong). After a brief courtship they are wed, and despite a language barrier and the Colonel's impotence, Bill attempts to prove his love as a companion and make amends for a history of regrets. (World Premiere)

Hipsters (Valeriy Todorovskiy, Russia)
Hipsters is a vibrant musical full of razzle, dazzle, and rhythm, which chronicles the 1950s conflict between Russia's communist government authorities bent on keeping all things Soviet, "normal" Russians primarily interested in surviving for one more day, and teens craving American pop culture - "stilyagi" or "hipsters". The battle of conformity and individual expression supplies a high level of tension that keeps one mentally interested in this marriage of Dostoyevsky and Footloose. (Southeast Premiere)

TiMER (Jac Schaeffer, USA)
What if a clock could count down to the moment you meet your soul mate? In this alternate version of present day Los Angeles, a revolutionary device called the TiMer fulfills this fantasy. Unless, that is, if you're Oona O'eary (Emma Caulfield, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), who faces the rare dilemma of a blank TiMer. Only when Oona ignores the ticking clock can she finally experience the exhilarating and unpredictable hot mess that is love. (Tennessee Premiere)

Waiting for Forever (James Keach, USA)
Life has gotten complicated for actress Emma Twist (Rachel Bilson). Her mediocre TV show has been canceled, she's on the rocks with her boyfriend Aaron (Matt Davis), and her father's (Richard Jenkins) illness has been deemed terminal. To make matters worse, her childhood friend Will Donner (Tom Sturridge) has decided now is the time to profess his true feelings for her. When everyone unexpectedly converges in Emma's hometown, questions of family, love, and how we live our lives are explored. (Southeast Premiere)

Phillip The Fossil (Garth Donovan, USA)
Set in small-town New England, Phillip The Fossil follows an aging party animal chasing the now extinct glory days of his youth. Blowing lines with kids half his age, making it rain in strip clubs, and voraciously pawing naive girls with "JUICY" tagged across their rears are all part of Phillip's relentless pursuit of the endless summer. He chuckles along as the carefree town jester, but beneath this suffocating guise Phillip feels increasingly isolated in the dead end rut he has so comfortably dug. 

Documentary Competition

City of Borders (Yun Suh, USA)
In the heart of Jerusalem - defying generations of segregation, violence and prejudice - stands an unlikely symbol of unity: a gay bar called 'Shushan.' Inside this underground sanctuary, people of all nationalities, religious affiliations and sexual orientations gather under one roof and forge a type of community. CITY OF BORDERS explores the bond forged when people from warring worlds embrace what everyone shares in common-the right to be accepted and belong-rather than be defined, or limited by the differences that tear them apart. (Southeast Premiere)

Cleanflix (Andrew James & Joshua Ligairi, USA)
Cleanflix follows the sanitized movie industry from inception to collapse. Starting with Kate Winslet's bare breasts in Titanic and the Mormon culture that didn't want to see them, the film launches into the numerous legal and theoretical debates that led to a DGA lawsuit involving industry titans. The film then tracks the dozen or so stores that defied court order and remained in operation, focusing on the infamous Daniel Thompson, de facto leader of Utah's the edited movie revival. (Tennessee Premiere)

Climate Refugees (Michael Nash, USA)
"Climate Refugees" uncovers the unbelievable plight of people around the world displaced by climatically induced environmental disasters. The documentary illuminates the human face of climate change and the collision that civilization now finds itself at between over population, lack of resources and our changing climate. By traveling the world and interviewing several of the 25 million climate refugees now on the run, "Climate Refugees" brings to light the heart wrenching truth of what is quickly becoming mankind's greatest challenge. (Southeast Premiere)

Cropsey (Joshua Zeman, USA)
Realizing the urban legend of their youth has actually come true; two filmmakers delve into the mystery surrounding five missing children and the real-life boogeyman linked to their disappearances. Cropsey, a feature-length documentary, offers an intimate, first hand account of one community's proximity to terror, its abandonment by the legal system, and the vigilant response to the death of its children. (Tennessee Premiere)

Fish Out of Water (Ky Dickens, USA)
Coming out of the closet can be challenging and for Ky Dickens, her experience coming out to friends at Vanderbilt University led to the making of "Fish Out of Water," a spirited documentary that explores the seven Bible passages notoriously used to condemn homosexuality and justify marriage discrimination. With the help of a cartoon narrator, animated recollections of Bible passages and witty illustrations, "Fish Out of Water"makes this polarizing subject accessible and non-threatening.

Out in the Silence (Dean Hamer, USA)
The announcement of filmmaker Joe Wilson's wedding to another man ignites a firestorm of controversy and a quest for change in the small Pennsylvania hometown he left long ago. Drawn back by a plea for help from the mother of a gay teen being tormented at school, Wilson takes viewers on an exhilarating journey through love, hate, and understanding in rural America. (Southeast Premiere)

Queen of the Sun (Taggart Siegel, USA)
In 1923, Rudolf Steiner, an Austrian Scientist, predicted that in only 80 to 100 years, honeybees would collapse. "Queen of The Sun" investigates and reveals the causes of the recent collapse, from highly mechanized industrial beekeeping practices to pesticide-driven agriculture, disease and artificial queen breeding. Through the voices of beekeepers around the world, "Queen of The Sun" weaves a dramatic story that uncovers the problems and solutions in renewing a culture in balance with nature. (World Premiere)

Racing Dreams (Marshall Curry, USA)
Academy Award nominated director, Marshall Curry, chronicles these young drivers' lives in intimate detail -- at home, at school, and on the track - to tell a universal story about adolescence, family, and a love of racing. "Racing Dreams" will introduce new audiences to the sport of racing, and for the 75 million Americans who already love it; it will be a familiar celebration of family, country and speed. (Tennessee Premiere)

Saturday Night (James Franco, USA)
With unprecedented access to the behind the scenes process of the writers, actors and producers, Franco and his crew document what it takes to create one full episode of Saturday Night Live. (Southeast Premiere)

Southern Belle (Kathy Konkwright, Mary Makley, USA)
The Civil War may be long over but the spirit of rebellion is hard to extinguish in the South even in something as innocent as a girls' summer camp. "Southern Belle" is a unique insider's look at the 1861 Athenaeum Girls' School in Columbia, Tennessee where young women from around the world eagerly sign up to become that iconic and romantic image of southern identity: the southern belle, replete with hoop skirt, hat and gloves, singing the region's anthem, Dixie. Even today, the southern belle and the values she embodies are at the heart of every political discussion driving positions on civil rights, women's rights, the sanctity of marriage, and federal versus state government power - to name a few. To understand the Athenaeum Girls' School's icon of the Old South is to better understand the issues that continue to define and divide America today. (World Premiere)

Stages (Meerkat Media Collective, USA)
Over twenty weeks, a group of older Puerto Rican women and inner-city youth unite in New York City's oldest community center to create an original play out of the stories of their lives. Weaving together themes of immigration, evolution, aging and coming of age, Stages offers an intimate portrait of an unlikely ensemble, transformed by the liberating power of their own stories-- first as they are spoken across generations, and later when they are performed for a sold-out show. (Tennessee Premiere)

When the Dragon Swallowed the Sun (Dirk Simon, USA)
"When the Dragon Swallowed the Sun" shows an unprecedented inside perspective on the Tibetan community in exile, it's young generation and their struggle to free their homeland Tibet. The film reveals an internal conflict that has been dividing Tibetans and hindering their movement for decades, and explores the struggle of a young Tibetan King alongside the peers of his generation. It reveals for the first time how they try to reflect on their history, while simultaneously redefining their identities. (Southeast Premiere)

Music Films/Music City Competition

The Bass Player (A Song for Dad) (Niall McKay, Ireland)
In this eloquent, witty homage to his father, filmmaker Niall McKay wrestles with his family's unsettling past to overcome his fear of commitment. As Niall helps his elderly father Jim, a jazz bass player, return home to Ireland, father and son revisit Niall's tumultuous childhood with an abusive, unpredictable mother and a musician father who was often on the road. Striking many poignant chords, the filmmaker's evolving notions of family and commitment will charm and amuse. (Southeast Premiere)

Do It Again ( Robert Patton-Spruill, USA)
In "Do It Again," newspaper reporter Geoff Edgers launches his crazy idea to reunite the Kinks. The film takes us through backstage hotspots, as Geoff works toward telling the story of his favorite, underappreciated rock band. Along his journey, we'll encounter Sting, Zooey Deschanel, Clive Davis, Robyn Hitchcock, Paul Weller and Peter Buck. Will Geoff succeed in his goal, when he finally encounters the leaders of the band, Ray and Dave Davies? (Tennessee Premiere)

Don't Quit Your Daydream (Clark Stiles, USA)
Nathan and Clark are life-long musicians, and sometimes friends, who refuse to delegate their childhood dreams to a hobby. These two forty-year-old band mates ditch their day jobs, and for one month, drive across the country stopping in a new town every other day to collaborate with unknown local musicians. Throughout their journey they encounter a diverse cast of strangers who force them to reconsider what it means to live a life dedicated to the art of music. (World Premiere)

For Once in My Life (Jim Bigham, USA)
A true story about a band made up of singers and musicians with a wide range of mental and physical disabilities. This documentary is an inspiring look at a special group and their dream to make music. In a cinema verite style, the film reveals the struggles and triumphs, as performers and people, dealing with severe challenges while on a journey to become true musicians and perform to large audiences. (Southeast Premiere)

For the Sake of Song: The Story of Anderson Fair (Bruce Bryant, USA)
For forty years, Houston's legendary folk and acoustic music venue, Anderson Fair Retail Restaurant, has fostered and nurtured some of the most important musical performers and songwriters in America. This film explores the significant role "the Fair" has played in preserving an American musical tradition, as a unique American music institution. "For The Sake Of The Song" tells the tale of one small place where the sound is true, the spotlight gentle, the applause encouraging, and big things happen. (Southeast Premiere)

James Blunt: Till You're Told to Stop (Ruth Somalo, UK)
"Till You're Told To Stop" follows the voyage of a humble British soldier who resigned from his post as a Queen's Guard to become a musician. It tracks the steps of James Blunt, an artist with no musical background through to his enormous worldwide success with his debut album "Back To Bedlam." (Southeast Premiere)

Ne Change Rien (Pedro Costa, Portugal/France)
In Ne Change Rien, we see the French actress/singer Jeanne Balibar rehearsing, recording, performing and practicing with a singing coach for an opera bouffe by Jacques Offenbach. The Portuguese director Pedro Costa filmed her in long, static shots in which all attention is focused on her performance. Costa also manages to portray the creative process, for instance in a scene in which Balibar and her guitarist Rodolphe Burger try out several variations of a song. (Southeast Premiere)

Radio On: The Shawn and Hobby Band Documentary (Steve Condon, USA)
How exactly does a former acoustic duo playing dive bars in Pittsburgh turn into one of the most popular and successful house bands in Nashville, in just about a year?
(World Premiere)


The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls (Leanne Pooley, New Zealand)
THE TOPP TWINS: UNTOUHABLE GIRLS is a profile of the world's only comedic, singing, dancing, lesbian twin sisters. Fun, disarming and musically provocative, the Topp Twins are New Zealand's finest lesbian country and western singers and the country's greatest export since rack of lamb and the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. (Southeast Premiere)

Why Isn't Chris von Sneidern Famous? (Kathleen McNamara, USA)
'You're so good, you should be famous' sounds like words anyone would love to hear, but after 12 albums and over 20 years, the compliment wears thin. Critically acclaimed for his musical talents and infamous for his charismatic and uncompromising personality, singer/songwriter and guitarist, Chris von Sneidern (CVS) is a long-time fixture of San Francisco's independent music scene. This is the story of his passionate search for artistic freedom and success, and the challenge posed by the inevitable disparity between our dreams and reality. (Southeast Premiere)

New Directors Competition

Bomber (Paul Cotter, UK, USA)
An 83-year-old man returns to Germany for a long planned journey of atonement. When Ross, his useless son agrees to drive him there, a nightmare family road trip ensues. (Southeast Premiere)

The Burial (Danielle Boucher, David William Mills, France)
When three estranged brothers gather for their mother's funeral the last thing they expected was a family road trip. Mother's final wish was clear: "take me to the river and bury me with your Father." The reluctant sons, a girlfriend and a coffin squash into a vintage hearse, bumble their way from France to England, and realize that to bury the past, there's some digging up to do. (North American Premiere)

Dear Lemon Lima (Suzi Yoonessi, USA)
As sweet and colorful as a snow cone, this delightful happy-sad confection follows an awkward Alaskan teen as she discovers her Yup'ik heritage, while rallying her fellow misfits to compete in her school's Snowstorm Survivor competition.(Tennessee Premiere)

Fighting Fish (Annette Apitz, USA)
Twenty-one-year-old David still lives at home, taking care of his young siblings. When his wild and beautiful sister Alice returns after a long absence, their complicated past comes back to haunt them. As David falls in love with the new girl in town, Alice is driven to desperate measures to keep her brother close, and her world intact. (World Premiere)

Herpes Boy (Nathaniel Atcheson, USA)
Rudolph Murray (Byron Lane, "Herpes Boy" web series) hates his life. He has a large purple birthmark on his upper lip and everyday he finds someone staring, pointing, or calling him names-like Herpes Boy. He makes videos for the Internet in which he rants about his quirky life and zany family. When his cousin (Ahna O'Reilly, "Forgetting Sarah Marshall") re-edits his videos to make herself more popular, it attracts a huge new audience and makes Rudolph an unlikely-and unwilling-cyber-celebrity at the worst possible time in his life. (Southeast Premiere)

New Low (Adam Bowers, USA)
The worst thing about Wendell isn't his slightly balding head, skinny frame, or thin lips; it's that he's a bit of an idiot. He just started dating Vicky, an angry drunk, who conveniently shares his lack of ambition and cleanliness. But he might prefer a relationship with Joanna because she's a selfless social worker who doesn't have lip acne. Eventually, Wendell is going to have to decide whom he really belongs with: the best girl he's ever known -- or the worst. (Tennessee Premiere)

Northless (Rigoberto Pérezcano, Mexico/Spain)
Andres reaches the Mexican border to cross into the United Sates. There between each attempt, he discovers that Tijuana is a troubled city. As he waits there, Andres is not only confronted with his feelings and what he left behind, but also with those he meets. (Tennessee Premiere)

One Too Many Mornings (Michael Mohan, USA)
Peter has just run away from his girlfriend of 5 years, seeking solace in his estranged friend from high school, Fischer. Fischer lives in a church, for free, in exchange for turning off the lights and locking the doors. As Fischer tries to help Peter recover, Peter quickly learns that Fischer has much more serious problems of his own. "One Too Many Mornings" is a coming of age comedy about how running away from your problems can cause you to smack headfirst into someone else. (Southeast Premiere)

Pickin' and Grinnin' (Jon Gries, USA)
Jon Gries (Uncle Rico in "Napoleon Dynamite") directs this comic take-off on reality music competitions like "Nashville Star"and "American Idol." (World Premiere)

Secure Space (Oren Gvili, Israel)
A bride, groom and their families are stranded within a bomb shelter in the Israeli city of Haifa, while the Second Lebanon war is raging outside. The pressure of wedding preparations, the crowdedness, the perspiration and the sultriness are mixed with the sirens and bombings outside, leading to a new climax of fear when the family finds the groom's 16-year-old brother roaming outside, hanging direction signs for the wedding ceremony. As the groom goes out in search of his brother, a series of events bring him to new conclusions about the fragileness of his present and future life. (North American Premiere)

Snow & Ashes (Charles-Olivier Michaud, Canada)
An armed conflict rages in a region of Eastern Europe. Blaise Dumas, war journalist for Frontline Reporters covers the war. In Quebec, when he erupts from a coma, Blaise discovers that his long time collaborator and photographer has not come back with him. Blaise sets out to remember the events that lead to his friend's disappearance and his own escape from the war zone. A compelling human, post-modern western tale. (Southeast Premiere)

Vegetarian (Seong-woon Lim, South Korea)
A young woman abolishes meat from her diet and her home, and soon rejects her husband, who smells of meat. Rejected by her family as a result, she grows despondent, alienating herself from everyone. Her sister tries to reach her, but only her brother-in-law, an artist, manages to penetrate her withdrawn state. Her mysterious trauma ignites creativity and desire in him, and they collaborate passionately on beautiful body-painting art -- drawing on her psychological pain but also providing the catalyst for her mystical transformation. (Southeast Premiere)

About Nashville Film Festival
The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal online, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2009, NaFF' attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2009, nearly 23,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 258 films from 48 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William Shatner, Hal Holbrook, Vincent D'Onofrio, Sheryl Crow, William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Giancarlo Esposito, Ray McKinnon, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, Kevin Smith, Barbara Kopple, and D.A. Pennebaker.

Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous patrons and sponsors.
 
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 February 25, 2010
Minimize

Nashville Film Festival Announces 2010 Narrative Features and First-Time Filmmakers in Competition

'Hipsters,' 'New Low,' 'One Too Many Mornings' and World Premiere of 'Art House' Among Highlights

NASHVILLE, Tennessee - February 24, 2010 - "Art House," a film starring Greta Gerwig ("Hannah Takes the Stairs," "Baghead," "Greenberg") and punk-rock icon Iggy Pop will world premiere as part of the Narrative Features Competition at the 2010 Nashville Film Festival (NaFF), which takes place April 15-22 at the Regal Green Hills Cinemas. Directed by Victor Fanucchi, "Art House" is one of a dozen films in the competition, which will also include the Southeastern US premieres of the Russian musical "Hipsters" by director Valeriy Todorovskiy and "The Athlete," directors Davey Frankel and Rasselas Lakew's profile of the great Ethiopian marathon runner Abebe Bikila.

Rounding out the announced narrative features in competition are "Applause" (Martin Zandvliet, Denmark);  "Backyard" (Carlos Carerra, Mexico);  "Beyond the Pole" (David L. Williams, UK); "The Be All End All" (Bruce Webb, UK); the world premiere of the "Colonel's Bride" (Brent Stewart, USA); "TiMER" (Jac Schaeffer, USA); and "Waiting for Forever" (James Keach, USA). Two more films will be announced in the weeks ahead.

"The quality of films I had to choose from this year was outstanding," said NaFF artistic director Brian Owens. "Each year I feel that talented filmmakers from around the world are raising the bar on what's possible to bring to the screen, and getting even more creative in how they are telling stories. I could easily program an entire other festival with what I couldn't fit in. I'm excited to bring such a stellar variety of films to Tennessee."

Entries to the Festival, which began in July of last year, reached a new level this year, with 2,216 feature-length narrative, documentary and short films from 82 countries.

The First-Time Filmmakers Competition, new this year to NaFF, was also announced, highlighting a dozen films by directors making their feature-length debuts. Among highlights in the competition are Adam Bowers' "New Low," in which a ne'er do well must choose between a similar self-loather and a selfless social worker, and Michael Mohan's coming-of-age comedy "One Too Many Mornings," in which a young man fleeing from life and love problems runs headfirst into the problems of his consoler.

Patron level memberships that include an All-Festival Pass, an invitation to the 2010 NaFF Patrons Party and priority seating at the Festival, can be purchased now at
NashvilleFilmFestival.org. Individual tickets for the 2010 Nashville Film Festival will go on sale online in early April.

A comprehensive listing of announced films in the Narrative Feature and First-Time Filmmaker Competitions follows. Two additional films in each category, and a complete list of films screening at the 2010 Nashville Film Festival, will be announced in early March.

Media Credentials
Members of the media interested in attending the Festival and applying for media credentials should put their request in writing to Joe Pagetta, Media Relations Manager, at
jpagetta@wnpt.net. Requests should include complete name, title, affiliation and contact info, intended type of coverage and expected publication or air date.

Narrative Feature Competition

APPLAUSE (Martin Zandvliet, Denmark)
When the critically-acclaimed actress Thea Barfoed (Paprika Steen) ends her rehab, she confronts a hard choice. During her heavy drinking period, she divorced and lost custody of her two boys; now she wants them to be a part of her life again. Her ex-husband Christian is quickly softened by her tough, manipulative, but charming figure and agrees. She has to prove to herself and to him, but the hard life on stage, and the ghosts of the past slowly comes knocking on her door. (Southeast Premiere)

ART HOUSE (Victor Fanucchi, USA)
A communal house left in trust many years ago to provide art students support in the way of free housing, Art House has accumulated its share of legends, lore, art, art junk and a reputation for hard partying. When a university dean and an influential descendant of the original benefactor decide to turn the place into housing for varsity golf, the residents' only chance of blocking the move is to prove their value and vitality as an artistic community. The burden is on art student Nora Ohr (Greta Gerwig), who is energetic, compassionate, but by no means perfect. Can the residents of Art House get their act together and make a name for themselves as artists before they're kicked out? Cast includes Iggy Pop. (World Premiere)

THE ATHLETE (Davey Frankel, Rasselas Lakew, Ethiopia)
This unique and elegant hybrid of autobiography, biopic and documentary tells the inspiring story of the great Ethiopian marathon runner Abebe Bikila, who in 1960 became the first African athlete to win gold at the Olympics: a new world record, and barefoot at that. Four years later in Tokyo, he did it all again, this time wearing shoes, and at age 32, Abebe Bikila became the first man to win consecutive marathons at the Olympics. Bikila's story took a shocking turn after these triumphs, yet nothing could keep him from pursuing his dreams all the way to the finish line and inspiring generations of Africans in the process. (Southeast Premiere)

BACKYARD (Carlos Carerra, Mexico)
The true story of the border town of Juarez, Mexico where since the mid-90's thousands of women have gone missing or turned up as sun-burnt corpses in the desert. Can new police captain Blanca Bravo (Ana de la Reguera) stop the savagery? (Tennessee Premiere)

THE BE ALL END ALL (Bruce Webb, UK)
Fifteen-year-old lads Robbie and Ziggy have been best mates all their lives. When Robbie finds out he's got a fatal heart condition, he's got just one final wish: "You've got to get a girl to shag me," he pleads with Ziggy. Now it's up to Ziggy to get a girl into Robbie's bed ... by any means necessary. Packed with plenty of delightfully slangy Brit wit, this hilarious and heartwarming tale is a mature account of what it means to be a friend. (Southeast Premiere)

BEYOND THE POLE (David L. Williams, UK)
Brian and Mark are setting out on the first carbon neutral, vegetarian, and organic expedition ever to attempt to reach the North Pole. As a world-first, they have high hopes of getting into the Guinness Book of Records and, if all goes well, of saving the planet from Global Warming. Unfortunately, they hadn't reckoned on the polar bears, the competitive gay Norwegians or on Mark's rapidly loosening grip on reality. No one said saving the planet was easy, but does it have to be this hard? Beyond the Pole is Touching the Void with laughs, and Withnail and I on ice. Funny and subversive, it's the story of two men trying to find their place in the world before the end of the world. It asks one question of us all: how far would you go to save the planet? (Tennessee Premiere)

THE COLONEL'S BRIDE (Brent Stewart, USA)
A fallen man and retired US Army Colonel, Bill (JD Parker) is an occasional commercial real-estate agent who spends most of his waking hours in the company of bourbon, cigarettes and a persistent cough. Attempting to make amends with a tattered past, he embraces a young, Vietnamese mail-order bride (Alicia Truong). After a brief courtship they are wed, and despite a language barrier and the Colonel's impotence, Bill attempts to prove his love as a companion and make amends for a history of regrets. (World Premiere)

HIPSTERS (Valeriy Todorovskiy, Russia)
A vibrant musical might not be what you'd expect from contemporary Russian cinema, but Valery Todorovsky's Hipsters is an Iron Curtain version of Swing Kids meets Hairspray, bursting with razzle, dazzle and, of course, rhythm. The film chronicles the 1950s conflict between Russia's communist government authorities bent on keeping all things Soviet, "normal" Russians primarily interested in surviving for one more day, and teens craving American pop culture -- "stilyagi" or "hipsters." The battle of conformity and individual expression supplies a high level of tension that keeps one mentally interested in this marriage of Dostoyevsky and Footloose. (Southeast Premiere)

TiMER (Jac Schaeffer, USA)
What if a clock could count down to the moment you meet your soul mate? In this alternate version of present day Los Angeles, a revolutionary device called the TiMER fulfills this fantasy. For a reasonable installation fee and moderate monthly charges, a TiMER implanted in the wrist will accurately display the numbers of days, hours, minutes and seconds until the wearer's date with destiny, unless, that is, you're Oona O'eary (Emma Caulfield, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), who faces the rare dilemma of a blank TiMER.  Her soul mate -- whomever and wherever he is -- doesn't have a TiMER. Only when Oona ignores the ticking clock can she finally experience the exhilarating and unpredictable hot mess that is love. (Tennessee Premiere)

WAITING FOR FOREVER (James Keach, USA)
Who decides what is normal? A unique love story about friendship and a view of the world from different perspectives, Waiting for Forever explores the connections people make in the face of life's changes. Best friends while they were growing up, Emma (Rachel Bilson) and Will (Tom Sturridge) lost touch a long time ago -- as far as she knows. To Will, who survives on his talent as a juggler and entertainer, Emma never stopped being the most important person in his life. When Emma's father gets sick, Emma returns to their hometown, trying to leave behind her complicated love life and failing career as a TV actress. As its characters face love, death and their own preconceptions, Waiting for Forever questions the realities of life. (Southeast Premiere)

First-Time Filmmaker Competition

BOMBER (Paul Cotter, UK, USA)
An 83-year-old man returns to Germany for a long planned journey of atonement. When Ross, his useless son agrees to drive him there, a nightmare family road trip ensues. (Southeast Premiere)

THE BURIAL (Danielle Boucher, David William Mills, France)
When three estranged brothers gather for their mother's funeral the last thing they expected was a family road trip. Mother's final wish was clear: "take me to the river and bury me with your Father." The reluctant sons, a girlfriend and a coffin squash into a vintage hearse, bumble their way from France to England, and realize that to bury the past, there's some digging up to do. (North American Premiere)

DEAR LEMON LIMA (Suzi Yoonessi, USA)
As sweet and colorful as a snow cone, this delightful happy-sad confection follows an awkward Alaskan teen as she discovers her Yup'ik heritage, while rallying her fellow misfits to compete in her school's Snowstorm Survivor competition. (Tennessee Premiere)

FIGHTING FISH (Annette Apitz, USA)
Twenty-one-year-old David still lives at home, taking care of his young siblings. When his wild and beautiful sister Alice returns after a long absence, their complicated past comes back to haunt them. As David falls in love with the new girl in town, Alice is driven to desperate measures to keep her brother close, and her world intact. (World Premiere)

HERPES BOY (Nathaniel Atcheson, USA)
Rudolph Murray (Byron Lane, Herpes Boy web series) hates his life. He has a large purple birthmark on his upper lip and everyday he finds someone staring, pointing, or calling him names-like Herpes Boy. He makes videos for the Internet in which he rants about his quirky life and zany family, including his New Age mother (Beth Grant, No Country For Old Men, Little Miss Sunshine, Donnie Darko), emotionally distant father (Michael Chieffo, L.A. Confidential), and grumpy grandmother (Julianna McCarthy, The Young and the Restless). When his "actress-slash-model-slash-dancer"cousin (Ahna O'Reilly, Forgetting Sarah Marshall) re-edits his videos to make herself more popular, it attracts a huge new audience and makes Rudolph an unlikely-and unwilling-cyber-celebrity at the worst possible time in his life. Also starring Octavia Spencer (Ugly Betty), Zack Silva (Days of Our Lives), and celebrities from You Tube's LonelyGirl15 and MakeMeBad35. (Southeast Premiere)

NEW LOW (Adam Bowers, USA)
The worst thing about Wendell isn't his slightly balding head, skinny frame, or thin lips; it's that he's a bit of an idiot. He just started dating Vicky, an angry drunk, who conveniently shares his lack of ambition and cleanliness. But he might prefer a relationship with Joanna because she's a selfless social worker who doesn't have lip acne. Eventually, Wendell is going to have to decide who he really belongs with: the best girl he's ever known -- or the worst. (Tennessee Premiere)

NORTHLESS (Rigoberto Pérezcano, Mexico, Spain)
Andres reaches the Mexican border to cross into the United Sates. There between each attempt, he discovers that Tijuana is a troubled city. As he waits there, Andres is not only confronted with his feelings and what he left behind, but also with those he meets. (Tennessee Premiere)

ONE TOO MANY MORNINGS (Michael Mohan, USA)
Peter has just run away from his girlfriend of 5 years, seeking solace in his estranged friend from high school, Fischer. Fischer lives in a church, for free, in exchange for turning off the lights and locking the doors. It's a good fit for him - he doesn't really have any aspirations beyond that. As Fischer tries to help Peter recover, Peter quickly learns that Fischer has much more serious problems of his own. One Too Many Mornings is a coming of age comedy about how running away from your problems can cause you to smack headfirst into someone else. (Southeast Premiere)

SNOW & ASHES (Charles-Olivier Michaud, Canada)
An armed conflict rages in a region of Eastern Europe. Blaise Dumas, war journalist for Frontline Reporters covers the war. In Quebec, when he erupts from a coma, Blaise discovers that his long time collaborator and photographer has not come back with him. Blaise sets out to remember the events that lead to his friend's disappearance and his own escape from the war zone. A compelling human, post-modern western tale that forces us to reflect and ask moral questions about the unpredictable choices of life, the strength of the media and the sacrifices that journalists have to make for their craft. (Southeast Premiere)

VEGETARIAN (Seong-woon Lim, South Korea)
A young woman abolishes meat from her diet and her home, and soon rejects her husband, who smells of meat. Rejected by her family as a result, she grows despondent, alienating herself from everyone. Her sister tries to reach her, but only her brother-in-law, an artist, manages to penetrate her withdrawn state. Her mysterious trauma ignites creativity and desire in him, and they collaborate passionately on beautiful body-painting art-drawing on her psychological pain but also providing the catalyst for her mystical transformation. (From Sundance Film Festival) (Southeast Premiere)

About Nashville Film Festival
The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal online, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2009, NaFF' attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2009, nearly 23,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 258 films from 48 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William Shatner, Hal Holbrook, Vincent D'Onofrio, Sheryl Crow, William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Giancarlo Esposito, Ray McKinnon, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, Kevin Smith, Barbara Kopple, and D.A. Pennebaker.

Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Ragsdale Family Foundation, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous patrons and sponsors.  

 October 6, 2009
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For Immediate Release
 

Nashville Film Festival and Nashville Children’s Theatre Want Fresh Filmmakers “Diaries”
for their Annual Student Competition
 

Finalists to be shown at NCT event in February; Grand Prize winner screened at NaFF in April
 

 

NASHVILLE, Tennessee – October 2, 2009 – Nashville Film Festival (NaFF) and Nashville Children’s Theatre (NCT) are once again partnering to present the “Fresh Filmmakers Competition”  for students between the ages of 13 and 18 years -- this time with a “diary” twist. The call-for-entries is now through January 4. Finalists will be screened at the Nashville Children’s Theatre on Saturday, February 6, 2010, as part of a joint evening that includes a performance of the play, The Diary of Anne Frank.

The grand-prize winning film will be shown at the 2010 Nashville Film Festival as part of the Young Filmmakers Program on Saturday, April 17. The winner will also receive two all-festival laminates.

To qualify, all films must be written and directed by students between the ages of 13 and 18 years  (no restrictions to production staff), be 7 minutes or less in length and include a “diary” element, be it as a narrative device, prop or other creative way. A copy of student ID or other student verification must be included with entries.  Entries should be submitted by January 4, 2010, to Nashville Film Festival, attn: Fresh Filmmakers, 161 Rains Ave., Nashville, TN 37203. Finalists will be announced January 18.

In addition to the grand prize, all finalists will have their films screened at the February 6, 2010, NCT event, receive 4 free admissions to the event and 4 vouchers to the Nashville Film Festival. All entries receive 2 free admissions to the February 6, 2010, NCT Event.  Anyone attending the event will receive a FREE festival voucher to the Nashville Film Festival in April.

Individual tickets for the February 6, 2010 event at the Nashville Children’s Theatre are $12 for youths and $17 for Adults.

For more information about the competition or event, please contact Nashville Film Festival at (615) 742-2500 or info@nashvillefilmfestival.org.
 

About Nashville Film Festival

The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal online, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2009, NaFF’s attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2009, nearly 23,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 258 films from 48 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William Shatner, Hal Holbrook, Vincent D'Onofrio, William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Giancarlo Esposito, Ray McKinnon, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, Kevin Smith, Barbara Kopple, and D.A. Pennebaker.

Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, The H. Franklin Brooks Philanthropic Fund, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Frist Foundation, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Ragsdale Family Foundation, Target Stores, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous patrons and sponsors.
 

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 May 5, 2009
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Al Gore Presents REEL Current Award to Mai Iskander's "Garbage Dreams" at 2009 Nashville Film Festival

The REEL Current Award, chosen by Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Academy Award winner and former Vice President Al Gore to a Nashville Film Festival selection that provides extraordinary insight in a contemporary global issue, has been given to "Garbage Dreams," Mai Iskander's profile of the Zaballeen, Egypt's "garbage people.

 

Nashville, TN (PRWEB) May 5, 2009 -- After naming "Garbage Dreams" by director Mai Iskander the winner of the 2009 REEL Current Award at the Nashville Film Festival (NaFF), Al Gore -- Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Academy Award winner and former Vice-President of the United States -- recently presented the award to Iskander during a private meeting in Nashville.

 

"'Garbage Dreams' is a moving story of young men searching for a ways to eke out a living for their families and facing tough choices as they try to do the right thing for the planet," said Gore of the film. "Mai Iskander guides us into a 'garbage village,' a place so different from our own, and yet the choices they face there are so hauntingly familiar. Ultimately, 'Garbage Dreams' makes a compelling case that modernization does not always equal progress."

 

The REEL Current Award is chosen and presented by Gore each year to a documentary at NaFF that provides extraordinary insight into a contemporary global issue. Last year's winner was Michael O'Connell's "Mountain Top Removal."

 

Read the complete release at
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/05/prweb2387744.htm.

 

 April 20, 2009
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2009 Nashville Film Festival Wraps with "Make-Out with Violence" and "Shakespeare and Victor Hugo's Intimacies" Taking Top Prizes

 

Nashville, TN (PRWEB) April 24, 2009 -- In a festival that included appearances by William Shatner, Vincent D'Onofrio, Sheryl Crow, Hal Holbrook, Walton Goggins, Marianne Jean-Baptiste and Lee Ann Womack, a two-theatre sellout of opening film "(500) Days Of Summer," and the World Premiere of "William Shatner's Gonzo Ballet," it was a homegrown film that took the top juried prize at the 2009 Nashville Film Festival, which wrapped Thursday, April 23 at the Regal Green Hills Cinema. A jury comprised of film critic Elvis Mitchell, FilmSpecific.com's Stacey Parks, and director Claudia Weill ("Girlfriends") named "Make-out With Violence," the Deagol Brothers coming-of-age zombie drama shot in and around Nashville, as the winner of the Regal Cinemas Dreammaker Award for the best narrative feature.

 

Read the Complete Release here.

 
 March 27, 2009
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Contact: Joe Pagetta
(615) 259-9325 Ext. 211/ jpagetta@wnpt.net


For Immediate Release
Hi-Res Still Photos Available at flickr.com/nashvillefilmfestival

 

40th Nashville Film Festival Announces Films in Documentary and Narrative Feature Competitions 
World, U.S. and Southeastern U.S. Premieres Among Contenders for Major Juried Awards at 2009 Festival

 

NASHVILLE, Tennessee – March 27, 2009 – The 40th Nashville Film Festival (NaFF), which takes place April 16-23 at Regal Green Hills Cinemas, has announced the complete list of films in its documentary and narrative feature competitions. Documentaries will be divided into The Documentary Competition Presented by The Documentary Channel and Music Films/Music City. Both documentary competitions are co-programmed by Brian Owens, NaFF artistic director, and Kate Pearson, The Documentary Channel senior VP of programming and acquisitions.

"Who better to help program this competition than a person and an entity dedicated entirely to celebrating the craft of documentary film making," said Owens of NaFF partnership with The Documentary Channel. "Kate and I have really programmed an exciting and diverse collection of films that will enlighten, entertain and push the possibilities of what a documentary can accomplish."

The Documentary Competition Presented by The Documentary Channel jury is Dan Berger, Oscilloscope Labs; Ryan Harrington, IndiePix Studios; and Rachel Grady, co-director of Academy Award nominated film Jesus Camp. The Music Films/Music City jury is Kara Glennon, Programmer Indianapolis Int'l Film Festival; Mike Gramaglia, director, End of the Century: The Ramones; and Joe Pacheco, director, As Smart as They Are.

“As a former co-chairman of the Sinking Creek Film Festival, which has become the Nashville Film Festival, I’m thrilled that The Documentary Channel can expand its support of such an important institution in the documentary film world as this festival,” said Tom Neff, The Documentary Channel founder and CEO.  “Our mission at DOC is to be all things documentary, and so we’re proud to broaden our level of commitment and participation in the festival to include film selection, panels, judging, awards, online and network promotion and VIP hosting.  We hope these efforts help enhance the festival’s documentary division and also reflect the network’s multifaceted outreach to filmmakers.”
 
Adds Pearson:  "Taking our sponsorship to the next level has been an organic, mutually exciting experience for both the festival and DOC.  Brian Owens and Sallie Mayne have been enthusiastic colleagues and we are delighted to participate this year and hopefully in the years to come.  Participating in the documentary selection process has been a fantastic experience and the lineup of documentaries this year is outstanding. The current pool of talent is superb, and it makes the selection process difficult but very exciting."
 
For those unable to attend the Festival, The Documentary Channel will offer a retrospective broadcast of four documentaries from previous Nashville Film Festivals on Friday, April 17 and Saturday, April 18.
 
Narrative features will vie for two awards, the NaFF/Regal Cinemas Dreammaker Award, which entitles the winning film to a special industry screening next fall in a Los Angeles County Regal Cinema Award, and the Lonely Seal Award, sponsored by Lonely Seal Releasing, which offers the winning film a one-year international representation deal.

Other award opportunities include the REEL Current Award, given to a film screened at NaFF that provides extraordinary insight into a contemporary global issue; Best Music in a Feature Film, sponsored by Naxos of America; Impact of Music Award, sponsored by Gibson, for the film that best exemplifies the importance of music in everyday lives; Tennessee Independent Spirit Award, presented to the best film directed by a Tennessee resident; The Rosetta Miller Perry Award, sponsored by the Tennessee Tribune and presented to the best black filmmaker; the NPT Human Spirit Award, presented by Nashville Public Television; audience award for best documentary, sponsored by The Documentary Channel; audience award for best narrative feature, sponsored by Curb Records; and various awards for short films.

The narrative feature jury is Elvis Mitchell, film critic, Stacey Parks, FilmSpecific.com, and Claudia Weill, director, Girlfriends.

Documentary Competition Presented by The Documentary Channel  Films

Ask Not
Johnny Symon, U.S.A, 73 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Johnny Symon scheduled to attend
Presented in partnership with Middle TN Mental Health and Substance Abuse
Director Johnny Symons’ Ask Not is a rare and compelling exploration of the effects of the US military’s policy against openly gay service members. A provocative portrait of bravery amidst exclusion, the film reveals the personal stories of Americans willing to risk their lives for a country that criminalizes the act of coming out of the closet. 

Big River Man
John Maringouin, U.S.A, 100 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
John Maringouin, Kevin Ragsdale, Rich Ragsdale scheduled to attend
Al Gore REEL Current Award Nominee
Michael Phelps set the world on fire this past summer with his speed and dominance at the Olympics, but there’s another swimmer who holds some might impressive records – and he drinks two bottles of wine day and swims the lengths of the world’s longest rivers. His name is Marin Strel, a Slovenian endurance swimmer who has conquered the Mississippi, the Danube, and the Yangtze – highlighting pollution in the world. Now in his fifties, he attempts his greatest feat yet – the Amazon.

Capturing Reality
Pepita Ferrari, Canada, 98 minutes, U.S. Premiere
Pepita Ferrari scheduled to attend
Director Pepita Ferrari interviews a number of prominent documentary filmmakers - Werner Herzog, Kim Longinotto, Albert Maysles, and Errol Morris to name a few. Ferrari's goal was to find out where they get their inspiration and what their view is on their profession. The interviews are spliced with short excerpts that illustrate their arguments and beliefs.

Citizen Juling
Ing K, Thailand, 222 minutes, U.S. Premiere
The sprawling and humanistic Citizen Juling opens as the filmmakers ask celebrants of the 60th anniversary of King Bhumibol’s corination, “Why do you love the king?” Most respond with trepidation. A good Thai does not question the sacred ideological pillars of “Nation, Religion, King.” Thus begins a powerful exploration of the issues surrounding the Islamic insurgency in the south of Thailand, a nation whose democracy seems constantly at risk.

Crude
Joe Berlinger, U.S., 100 minutes – Southeastern U.S. Premiere
Joe Berlinger scheduled to attend
Al Gore REEL Current Award Nominee
Three years in the making, this cinéma-vérité feature from acclaimed filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother’s Keeper, Paradise Lost – screening in the Sinking Creek retrospective – and Metallica: Some Kind of Monster) is the epic story of one of the largest and most controversial legal cases on the planet. An inside look at the infamous $27 billion “Amazon Chernobyl” case, Crude is a real-life high stakes legal drama set against a backdrop of the environmental movement, global politics, celebrity activism, human rights advocacy, the media, multinational corporate power, and rapidly-disappearing indigenous cultures.

Empress Hotel
Irving Saraf and Allie Light, U.S., 95 minutes, World Premiere
Academy Award winners Irving Saraf, Allie Light, and Roberta Goodman scheduled to attend.
The Empress Hotel, a project of the San Francisco Department of Health, is home to a rarified clientele—sufferers of mental illness or addiction who have lived on the streets. Not every person can stay on meds or get clean, yet out of chaos and hopelessness, a community is formed. Empress Hotel tells the stories of ten residents, their interactions, celebrations, successes, and setbacks.

For the Love of Movies
Gerald Peary, U.S., 70 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Gerald Peary scheduled to attend
For a hundred years, virtually the entire history of American movies, film critics have championed this medium they so unabashedly love. Their reviews illuminate the film-going experience, suggesting paths for readers to enter cinema more deeply, thoughtfully, appreciatively. For the Love of Movies is the first documentary to dramatize the rich, fascinating history of American film criticism.

Garbage Dreams
Mai Iskander, Egypt / U.S., 83 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
Mai Iskander scheduled to attend
Al Gore REEL Current Nominee
“If there weren’t any garbage collectors, Cairo wouldn’t be clean,” says a teenager named Adham at the opening of Garbage Dreams. He is one of 60,000 Zaballeen; entrepreneurial garbage collectors who collect and recycle over one-third of Cairo’s waste — more than 3,000 tons a day. But the Zaballeen find themselves at a crossroads when their city’s government hires foreign multinational disposal companies to collect Cairo’s garbage.

Garrison Keillor:  The Man on the Radio in the Red Shoes
Peter Rosen, U.S., 84 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Peter Rosen scheduled to attend
Presented in partnership with WPLN, Nashville Public Radio
Arguably America’s foremost humorist and commentator, Garrison Keillor, takes his skits and jokes, music and monologues across the country in his traveling radio show, spinning his stories into American gold. This free form, intimate look at the private man in the public spotlight goes behind the scenes of America’s most popular radio show, A Prairie Home Companion, and inside the imagination of the man who created it. .

House of Numbers
Brent Leung, Canada, U.S., UK  87 minutes, World Premiere
Brent Leung and some subjects scheduled to attend.
Nashville filmmaker Brent Leung was born in 1980, just as the HIV/AIDS epidemic became headline news. Over the past eight years, he has gained access to and insight from some of the field’s top researchers and most influential policy-makers. What his film reveals is we understand a lot less about the epidemic than we are led to believe – conventional wisdom be damned.

Invisible Girlfriend
David Redmon and Ashley Sabin, U.S., 72 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
David Redmon and Ashley Sabin scheduled to attend.
Charles - whom we met in Redmon & Sabin's previous film Kamp Katrina - is madly in love with his girlfriend, Joan of Arc. So, he hops on his bike and leaves Monroe, LA for New Orleans, hoping to find her embodiment behind a Mardi Gras bar. Along the way he encounters a farmer, a witch, and a man who honors the dead.

Living in Emergency:  Stories from Doctors without Borders
Mark N. Hopkins, Italy, 93 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
Presented in partnership with Southern Hills Medical Center
In the war-zones of Liberia and Congo, four volunteers (including Nashville resident, Dr. TC Krueger) with Doctors Without Borders struggle to provide emergency medical care under extreme conditions. With different levels of experience, each volunteer must find his own way to face the challenges, the tough choices, and the limits of their idealism.

The Other Side of the Lens
Reed Cowan, U.S. / Kenya, 101 minutes, World Premiere
Reed Cowan scheduled to attend
On the evening of April 23, 2006, Emmy Award winning TV anchor and news reporter Reed Cowan was on call for his Salt Lake City employer. He was paged to the scene of the accidental hanging death of a child. Arriving on the scene, Cowan discovered that every parent’s nightmare – the loss of a child – was his own. The reporter became the news. The Other Side of the Lens is Reed Cowan’s first film and it follows Cowan and his journey of self-examination, liberation, and activism that would assist him through his grief.

Pressure Cooker
Mark Becker and Jennifer Grausman, U.S.A, 2008, 99 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Basketball had Hoop Dreams, spelling bees had Spellbound. Now competitive cooking has Pressure Cooker. Wilma Stephenson is the dynamic force behind the Careers Through Culinary Arts Program at Philadelphia’s Frankford High School. On the first day of class Stephenson tell her students, “Everything you’ve heard about me is true, only it’s 500 times worse.” She’s tough, but she knows that if she isn’t, her students are likely to repeat the mistakes of their parents – leaving them impoverished and trapped in the inner-city. Three of those students become the focus of Mark Becker and Jennifer Grausman’s camera. With Mrs. Stephenson’s leadership, they will try to win scholarships to some of the most prestigious cooking academies in the US – and they will develop a new recipe for the future.

Prodigal Sons
Kimberly Reed, U.S., 86 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Kimberly Reed scheduled to attend
Returning home to a Helena, Montana for her 20-year high school reunion, debut filmmaker Kimberly Reed hopes to rebuild her relationship with her adopted brother - and to capture the experience on camera. Instead of a simple tale of estrangement and reconciliation, Prodigal Sons offers deep questions of identity – gender identity, genetic identity, and the how traumatic brain injury can completely alter a loved one.

Shakespeare and Victor Hugo’s Intimacies
Yulene Olaizola, Mexico, 83 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
At the intersection of Shakespeare and Victor Hugo Streets in Mexico City sits Rosa Elena Carbajal’s lodging house. Her granddaughter, Yulene Olaizola takes her camera to delve into a mystery that occurred in her grandmother’s residence, a mystery involveing a former tenant deeply ashamed of his homosexuality and suffering schizophrenia. During the period that he lived in the house (until his death in 1993) 13 women fell victim to a mysterious serial killer in Mexico City.

Trust Us, This is All Made Up
Alex Karpovsky, U.S., 83 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
Some foolishly have the belief that “improvising” is simply “making things up”. To a degree, that’s true. To be able to do that and have the the New York Times describe you as, “…masters of long form improv" means you’re going a little further than simply making a few off the cuff jokes. TJ Jagodowski and David Pasquesi have become living legends in their field.

An Unlikely Weapon
Susan Morgan Cooper, U.S., 85 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Susan Morgan Cooper and Kyle Eastwood scheduled to attend
Eddie Adams photographed 13 wars, six American Presidents, and every major film star of the last 50 years. History would be changed through his lens. But the person Eddie found hardest to impress was himself. In 1968, in 1/500th of a second Eddie Adams photographed a Saigon police chief, General Nygoc Loan, shooting a Vietcong guerilla point black. Some say that photograph ended the Vietnam War. The photo brought Eddie fame and a Pulitzer, but he was haunted by the man he had vilified. Featuring narration by Kiefer Sutherland and a score by Kyle Eastwood and Michael Stevens (Letters from Iwo Jima).

Upstream Battle
Ben Kempas, Germany, 98 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
Director Ben Kempas scheduled to attend
Al Gore REEL Current Award nominee
A coalition of Native Americans battle to force the removal of dams owned by billionaire Warren Buffett that have devastated the salmon population on California's Klamath River.

William Shatner’s Gonzo Ballet
Patrick Buckley and Kevin Layne, U.S., 51 minutes, World Premiere
William Shatner, Ben Folds, Brad Paisley and Margo Sappington scheduled to attend
Presented in partnership with the Nashville Ballet
High art meets pop culture as the music of William Shatner ('Star Trek,' 'Boston Legal') and Ben Folds (Ben Folds Five), from their critically-acclaimed album, 'Has Been,' is transformed into 'Common People,' a ballet from award winning choreographer Margo Sappington (Oh! Caluctta!).

NaFF/Regal Cinemas Dreammaker Award and Lonely Seal Award Competition Films

Afterschool
Antonio Campos, USA, 2008, 106 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
(Ezra Miller, Addison Timlin, Rosemarie DeWitt)
Antonio Campos scheduled to attend.
At the center of 24-year-old director Antonio Campos’s debut feature is the 21st Century media technology. With the advent of You Tube and cell-phone video cameras, everything from giggling babies to impromptu acts of violence has become internet entertainment. In such a world, can young people engage in reality without the distance the screen creates? When Robert, a sophomore at an east coast prep school, is assigned to capture stock footage for the video yearbook, he inadvertently films the gruesome deaths of two of his classmates. Robert’s world is altered forever.

Baby Formula, The
Alison Reid, Canada, 2008, 82 minutes, U.S. Premiere
Presented in partnership with The A. Franklin Brooks Philanthropic Fund, William N Rollins Fund for the Arts and the Community Foundation of Middle Tennesee
Two adventurous women in love are desperate to have their own biological child. They take a chance on an experimental scientific process and make sperm from their own stem cells. Pregnant with humor and unexpected twists, their journey ultimately confirms that all life is a gift and all families are crazy.

Before Tomorrow
Marie-Hélène Cousineau and Madeline Piujuq Ivalu, Canada, 2008, 93 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
(Madeline Piujuq Ivalu, Paul-Dylan Ivalu, Peter-Henry Arnatsiaq, Mary Qulitalik, Tumasie Sivuarapik)
Reminiscent of the fantastic Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner, Marie-Helene Cousineau and Madeline Piujuq Ivalu’s debut feature represents another great stride forward in Inuit filmmaking. Ningiuq and Kutuujuk are elders of a 19th-century Inuit family. In the summer season, they join with neighboring families to share stories, celebrate, dine, and inter-marry. This year, however, the stories are about the impending advance of foreigners.

Buick Riviera
Goran Rusinovic, Croatia, 2008, 86 minutes, U.S. Premiere
Winner of the Heart of Sarajevo for Best Film and Best Actor prizes at the Sarajevo Film Festival, Buick Rivera is the story of two men from the ex-Yugoslavian nation of Bosnia - one a muslim and the other an Orthodox Christian. Both have emigrated to America and on one fateful night they meet and change each other's lives forever in the middle of the snow-covered plains.

Children of Invention
Tze Chun, U.S.A, 2009, 86 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
(Cindy Cheung, Michael Chen, Crystal Chiu)
Tze Chun scheduled to attend
Presented in partnership with the Chinese Arts Alliance
Single mother Elaine Cheng struggles to support her two children – Raymond and Tina - by juggling various jobs and selling various products freelance. When one too many of these products turns out to be nothing more than a pyramid scheme, the family finds itself homeless, and Elaine – in the US illegally – finds herself at risk of deportation. Meanwhile, Raymond dreams of various inventions hoping that, one day, one of them will make him rich enough to care for the whole family.

I Was Here
René Vilbre, Estonia, 2008, 95 minutes, U.S. Premiere
Rasmus Kaljujärv, Margus Prangel, Hele Kõre, Marilyn Jurman, Tambet Tuisk, Lembit Ulfsak)
Seventeen-year-old Rass is growing up in an Estonian suburb. In the absence of a solid home life his family becomes a group of youngsters who are verging on being thieves. Drugs are an inseparable part of their lives, and when Rass agrees to distribute them to make a living for himself, he gets tangled up in the narcotics trade.

Kisses
Lance Daly, Ireland, 2008, 78 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Kelly O’Neill, Shane Curry)
It’s Christmas Eve on the outskirts of Dublin. Youngsters Dylan and Kylie are neighbors, each struggling with the pressures of a dysfunctional family. So when yet another row with Dylan’s father erupts, the young boy decides to run away, with Kylie right behind him.

Make-out with Violence
The Deagol Brothers, U.S.A., 2008, 108 minutes
(Eric Lehning, Cody DeVos, Leah High, Brett Miller, Tia Shearer, Jordan Lehning, Josh Duensing, Shellie Marie Shartzer)
Entire cast and crew scheduled to attend.
In this genre-bending tale, a boy trys to fulfill his unrequited love for a girl who has risen from the dead. When a drive through the countryside surrounding their suburban community leads twin brothers Patrick and Carol Darling to the discovery of missing person Wendy's mysteriously animated corpse, the boys secretly transport the un-dead Wendy to an empty house in hopes of somehow bringing her back to life.

Mothers & Daughters
Carl Bessai, Canada, 2008, 85 minutes, Southeastern US Premiere
(Tantoo Cardinal, Babs Chula, Ben Cotton, Kathryn Kirkpatrick, Tinsel Korey, Sarah Lin, Gabrielle Rose)
Micki is a high-strung novelist who overwhelms her actress daughter. Brenda is a dedicated housewife whose husband has left her and she seeks the support of her daughter Kate. Celine owns her own business and is hired by Cynthia, a young professional remodeling her home and searching for her own identity. Each relationship has its challenges. The delight comes in seeing how they are met.

The Narrows
François Velle, U.S.A., 2008, 106 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
(Kevin Zegers, Sophia Bush, Vincent D’Onofrio)
Ami Armstrong, Kevin Zegers scheduled to attend
Mike Manadoro (Transamerica’s Kevin Zegers) has a choice to make - between the world he knows and the world that is promised to him. When he submits his photos to an arts program in Manhattan, he is offered a partial scholarship, but his father (Vincent D'Onofrio) is too proud to borrow the rest of the money necessary to pay Mike’s tuition. Thus, Mike takes a job delivering packages for the local “boss.”

Noble Things
Dan McMellen, U.S.A., 2009, 98 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Brett Moses, Lee Ann Womack, Michael Parks, Ryan Hurst, Dominique Swain, James Parks, Ron Canada)
Brett Moses, Lee Ann Womack, Michael Parks, Dominique Swain and Dan McMellen scheduled to attend
A struggling country music artist finds himself adrift in Memphis, Tennessee. Forced to return home to the piney woods of Southeast Texas, Jimmy Wayne Collins will face his imprisoned brother, his dying father and the demons he left behind.

Ordinary Boys
Daniel Hernandez, Morocco / Spain, 2008, 87 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Rabia Bouchfira, El-Khader Aoulasse, Youseff Belefki, Mohammed Saadoun)
Shot in Jamaa Mezwak of Tétouan, northern Morocco, where five of the terrorists responsible for Spain's March 11, 2004 bombings were born and bred, the film looks behind the myths that now taint the area to examine the particular situation of three young people all having to make key decisions about their lives.

Pachamama
Toshifumi Matsushita, Bolivia / Japan / US, 2008, 104 minutes, U.S. Premiere
(Christian Huaygua, Luis Mamani, Faniy Mosques, Francisco Gutíerrez, Hilaria Cabrera)
Presented in partnership with the Nashville Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
Toshifumi Matsushita – a Japanese director currently based out of New York City – beautifully brings to life the story of Kunturi – a 13-year-old Quechua boy living on the salt flats of Bolivia. After his grandmother’s death and his best friend move away, Kunturi joins his father on his first salt caravan, traveling through the beautiful Andean peaks and lush valleys below. On this journey, Kunturi will begin to understand how the adult world works – and how modernity is slowly encroaching on the rhythms of lives little changed over centuries.

Poundcake
Rafael Monserrate, U.S.A., 2008, 101 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Kathleen Quinlan, Jay O. Sanders, Troy Hall, Kevin Logie, Deshja Driggs, Rob Bogue)
Rafael Monserrate, Jay O. Sanders, Troy Hall, Kevin Logie and Deshja Driggs scheduled to attend
Thanksgiving 1987. Buffalo, NY. Cliff and Carol Morgan take their three grown children to The Golden Buddha Chinese Restaurant for an announcement. After thirty years of marriage, they are getting a divorce. Now they must spend what may be their last Thanksgiving together as a family, in as civilized a manner as possible.

Prince of Broadway
Sean Baker, U.SA, 2008, 100 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
(Prince Adu, Karren Karagulian, Aiden Noesi, Keyali Mayaga, Kat Sanchez, Victoria Tate)
Presented in partnership with the Tennessee Tribune.
Lucky, an illegal immigrant from Ghana, makes ends meet by soliciting shoppers on the street with knock-off brand merchandise. Levon, a Armenian-Lebanese immigrant, operates an illegal storefront with a concealed back room where counterfeit goods are showcased to interested shoppers. Lucky's world is suddenly turned upside down when a child is thrust into his life by a woman who insists the toddler is his son. Levon struggles to save a marriage that is falling apart.

Sita Sings the Blues
Nina Paley, U.S.A., 2008, 82 Minutes – Tennessee Premiere
Aseem Chhabra, Manish Acharya, Bhavana Nagulapally, Nina Paley, Reena Shah
Sita is a goddess separated from her beloved Lord and husband Rama. Nina is an animator whose husband moves to India, then dumps her by email. Three hilarious shadow puppets narrate both ancient tragedy and modern comedy in this beautifully animated interpretation of the Indian epic Ramayana.

Sorry, Thanks
Dia Sokol, U.S.A., 2009, 92 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Wiley Wiggins, Kenya Miles, Andrew Bujalski, Donovan Baddley, Ia Hernandez)
Dia Sokol, Lauren Veloski scheduled to attend
Kira is just out of a lengthy relationship and is feeling adrift. She meets Max (Dazed and Confused’s Wiley Wiggins) one night and the two of them hook up. A few nights later, she runs into Max – and his long-time girlfriend - at a bar.  Kira continues to drift, both professionally and romantically while Max develops two obsessions – one with Kira, and one with the nagging thought they he may very well be an asshole.

That Evening Sun
Scott Teems, U.S.A., 2009, 105 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Hal Holbrook, Ray McKinnon, Walton Goggins, Mia Wasikowska, Carrie Preston, Barry Corbin, Dixie Carter)
Presented in partnership with Maristone Senior Living
Scott Teems, Hal Holbrook, Dixie Carter, Walton Goggins, Barry Corbin, Ray McKinnon and Carrie Preston scheduled to attend
Abner Abner Meechum (Academy Award-nominee Hal Holbrook) is an aging Tennessee farmer. He's pretty much had it with the nursing home his lawyer son (Walton Goggins) has tossed him away to and flees to his home - only to find out that his home has leased it to oldest enemy (Ray McKinnon).

True Adolescents
Craig Johnson, U.S.A., 2009, 88 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Mark Duplass, Bret Loehr, Carr Thompson, Melissa Leo)
Craig Johnson, Gill Holland and Stu Pollard scheduled to attend
Indie sensation Mark Duplass (Baghead, Humpday) stars as Sam Bryant, an aging Seattle rocker with no “real job,” no record deal, and – after his girlfriend dumps him – no place to stay except with his suburban aunt Sharon (Melissa Leo, Academy Award-nominee, Frozen River). When Sam chaperones two his teen cousin and his cousin’s best friend on a camping trip, it's all giggles until one of the boys ends up separated and lost in the woods.

Vacation
Hajime Kadoi, Japan, 2008, 115 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
(Kaoru Kobayashi, Hidetoshi Nishijima, Nene Otsuka, Ren Osugi)
Hirai is a middle-aged prison guard. Despite being surrounded by colleagues, his work days are lonely – he attends the strict schedule of Kaneda – death row’s model inmate. When his prisoner’s execution orders are signed, Hirai has an unusual opportunity for vacation – a chance to travel with his fiancé and to improve the relationship with his soon-to-be stepson. This opportunity comes with a caveat, however: he must agree to be by Kaneda’s side at the moment of death.

Weathergirl
Blayne Weaver, U.S.A., 2009, 92 minutes, Southeastern Premiere
Tricia O’Kelley (The New Adventures of Old Christine) produces and stars as Sylvia Miller, a Seattle morning show weather girl who, after finding out that her anchor/boyfriend has been cheating on her with his co-host, has an expletive-laden meltdown on live television (her bosses can likely look for some FCC fines). In the wake of that episode, she has a hard time finding a job on Seattle television and moves in with her little brother and takes a job as a waitress.

 

Music Films/Music City Films

American Harmony
Aengus James, U.S.A., 2009, 86 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Barbershop Quartet to perform live
Presented in partnership with the Barbershop Harmony Society
American Harmony journeys deep into the obsessive, zany, heartfelt world of competitive barbershop singing, where passion is equaled only by talent, and the reward is not fame or fortune, but simply victory.

America’s Lost Band: The Remains
Michael Stich, U.S.A., 2008, 65 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
The Remains scheduled to attend
The Remains appeared on Ed Sullivan, opened for the Beatles, and then broke up just on the brink of fame. America’s Lost Band is a documentary of The Remains' return to Los Angeles for the first time in 40 years - since opening for the Beatles - a film that follows a group of 60-year-old musicians back together pursuing their passion.

Any Day Now
Jeff Wyatt Wilson, U.S.A., 2009, 92 minutes, World Premiere
Ten out of TN musicians scheduled to attend
In the summer of 2008, during harsh economic times, ten young singer/songwriters from Tennessee (Ten out of Tenn or TOT) set out on a journey to reinvent themselves on Willie Nelson's old 1984 tour bus performing a rebirth of music as a community of friends supporting each other during a competitive, intimidating era.

Ashes of American Flags:  The Wilco Tour Film
Brendan Canty and Christoph Green, U.S.A., 2009, 88 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
The great band Wilco have 8 HD cameras and 42 channels of Pro Tools follow them around the south while they play small historic venues to rabid crowds, while allowing us to view the south through these veteran travelers eyes.

Gogol Bordello: Non-Stop
Margarita Jimeno, U.S.A., 2008, 90 minutes, Tennessee Premeire
More than just a concert film, Gogol Bordello Non-Stop explores the roots of the band (indeed, they come from five different nations) and how global identity and politics can shape music.

The Heart is a Drum Machine
Christopher Pomerenke, U.S.A., 2009, 90 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
Celebrities as diverse as the Flaming Lips, the Dandy Warhols, Guns N’ Roses, George Clinton, Elijah Wood, Juliette Lewis, and Tool offer their answers to the seemingly simple but ultimately complex question: What is music? When you unleash more than 100 people to answer the question, you begin to capture the diversity that is music – and humanity.

Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison
Bestor Cram, U.S.A., 2008, 87 minutes, Southeastern Theatrical Premiere
(Note: not in competition)
Bestor Cram and John Carter Cash scheduled to attend
On 13 January 1968, Johnny Cash recorded his legendary live album at Folsom State Prison in California. 40 years later, the album hasn't lost a bit of its power. His children, former colleagues, and even some ex-prisoners and guards look back. Archive footage of life in the prison back then is interspersed with footage of how it is now, as well as still photography of the performance.

RiP:  A Remix Manifesto
Brett Gaylor, Canada, 2008, 85 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
Web activist and filmmaker Brett Gaylor explores issues of copyright in the information age, mashing up the media landscape of the 20th century and shattering the wall between users and producers. The film’s central protagonist is Girl Talk, a mash-up musician topping the charts with his sample-based songs. But is Girl Talk a paragon of people power or the Pied Piper of piracy?

Rock Prophecies
John Chester, U.S.A, 2009, 75 Minutes, Southeastern Premiere
Moments before his death, Stevie Ray Vaughn talked to Robert M. Knight, legendary rock photographer, one last time. “If anything ever happens to me,” he said, “you’ll know me when you hear me.” In the wake of tragedy, Knight would remember those haunting words, as they fueled his unyielding passion to find the next great guitarist.

Trimpin:  The Sound of Invention
Peter Esmonde, U.S.A., 2009, 79 minutes, Southeastern U.S. Premiere
The music of Trimpin has to be seen to be believed – and that’s not a syntactical error because Trimpin doesn’t just make music. He composes the music, plays the music, and creates the instruments upon which the music is played. Starting out in his workshop – a cross between Frankenstein’s lab and Santa’s Workshop – we are introduced to this (mad?) genius as he turns wooden clogs, toy pianos, and discarded guitars into brand new works of musical art.

Trying to Get Good:  The Jazz Odyssey of Jack Sheldon
Penny Peyser and Doug McIntyre, U.S.A., 2008, 90 minutes, Tennessee Premiere
You may remember Jack Sheldon as Merv Griffin's trumpet-wielding sidekick, or the indelible voice of School House Rock (“I’m just a bill. Yes I’m only a bill”), but musicians know him as a jazz giant. Featuring on-camera interviews with Clint Eastwood, Billy Crystal, Merv Griffin, Chris Botti, and Johnny Mandel among others, along with historic footage with Benny Goodman, Stan Kenton and other legendsm Penny Peyser and Doug McIntyre’s award-winning film examines the eternally dissatisfied soul of a musical perfectionist and his quest to just 'figure things out' – both musically and personally.

Youssou Ndour:  I Bring What I Love
Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Senegal / USA, 2008, 102 minutes, Southeastern US Premiere
Arguably the most successful African pop artist in history, Youssou Ndour's distinctive voice became known internationally through a string of popular tracks, including collaborations with Peter Gabriel and Neneh Cherry. Not resting on fame, Ndour used his popularity to shed light on issues important to him. The film follows him as he releases Egypt – a call to his fellow Muslims for peace in a post-9/11 world.

TICKETS and TWITTER
Individual tickets for the 2009 Nashville Film Festival will go on sale to general public in April 7 online at NashvilleFilmFestival.org. All-Festival Laminates can be purchased now via a Patron Level Membership. NaFF is also Twittering updates @nashfilmfest (hash tag #NaFF09).

MEDIA CREDENTIALS
Members of the media interested in attending the Festival and applying for media credentials should fill out the media credentials request form available in the press room at NashvilleFilmFestival.org.

About The Documentary Channel®:
The Documentary Channel (DOC) is the USA’s first 24-hour television network exclusively devoted to documentary films and the independent documentary filmmaker, providing viewers with round-the-clock opportunities to see fascinating, eclectic and award-winning documentary films of all lengths and genres.  Headquartered in Nashville, Tenn., with offices in New York and Los Angeles, DOC was founded by Oscar®-nominated and Emmy®-winning documentary filmmaker Tom Neff (CEO) in January 2006.  DOC now reaches more than 21 million homes nationwide via DISH Network (Channel 197) and several broadcast stations in major television markets, including NYC TV (Channel 25) throughout the greater New York metropolitan area.  DOC also provides content to online distribution outlets through www.youtube.com/documentarychannel and www.sling.com/network/189/The-Documentary-Channel. For more information on DOC, visit www.documentarychannel.com


About Nashville Film Festival
The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2007, NaFF’s attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2008, more than 22,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 240 films from 44 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Lawrence Bender, Ray McKinnon, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, and D.A. Pennebaker.
Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, The H. Franklin Brooks Philanthropic Fund, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Frist Foundation, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Ragsdale Family Foundation, Target Stores, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous. patrons and sponsors.


 

# # #
 March 18, 2009
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Contact: Joe Pagetta
(615) 259-9325 Ext. 211/ jpagetta@wnpt.net

 

For Immediate Release
Hi-Res Still Photos Available at flickr.com/nashvillefilmfestival

 

"(500) Days of Summer" to Open 40th Annual Nashville Film Festival
 
Zooey Deschanel, Joseph Gordon-Levitt Film Kicks off Eight Days of World and U.S. Premieres, Celebrity Guests, Panels, Workshops, Short Programs and More

 

NASHVILLE, Tennessee – March 18, 2009  – (Update 3/18/09 5:00 p.m. Release now indicates that Al Gore will present the REEL Current award but is not currently scheduled to attend). (500) DAYS OF SUMMER, an offbeat romantic comedy starring Zooey Deschanel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and directed by Marc Webb, will officially kick off the 40th anniversary of Nashville Film Festival (NaFF) April 16-23, 2009 at Regal Green Hills Cinema. Following its premiere at Sundance and appearance at SXSW, Nashville will mark only the third screening of the film and its Southeastern U.S. premiere. In the film, Deschanel (Almost Famous, Elf, All the Real Girls) plays Summer, a young woman who doesn't believe true love exists. Gordon-Levitt (3rd Rock From the Sun, 10 Things I Hate About You, Brick) stars as Tom, the hopeless romantic that falls for her. When Tom, a greeting card copywriter, is blindsided after Summer breaks up with him, he shifts back and forth through various periods of their 500 days together to try to figure out where things went wrong. His reflections ultimately lead him to rediscover his true passions in life. Webb is scheduled to attend.


Joining (500) DAYS OF SUMMER on opening night will be the U.S. premiere of CAPTURING REALITY: THE ART OF DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKING and a special presentation of THE LONELY, a documentary film about the making of Harmony Korine's MISTER LONELY, that Korine is scheduled to attend. CAPTURING REALITY is the first of many films vying in the documentary competition presented by The Documentary Channel. 


As previously announced, NaFF will world premiere WILLIAM SHATNER'S GONZO BALLET, a film chronicling the quest by the Milwaukee Ballet to create a new work based upon Shatner's critically acclaimed album, Has Been. The film, by directors Patrick Buckley and Kevin Layne, will screen on Friday, April 17 at 7:00 p.m. with Shatner, composer and Has Been producer Ben Folds, Milwaukee Ballet choreographer and director Margo Sappington and country music star Brad Paisley scheduled to attend.


Other notable guests scheduled to attend the festival this year and join the multitude of filmmakers accompanying their films to Nashville, include Oscar and Golden Globe nominated actress Kathleen Quinlan (Apollo 13, I Never Promised You a Rose Garden) and cast mates Jay O. Sanders, Troy Hall and Kevin Logle, who will attend the Southeastern U.S. premiere of their Rafael Monserrate-directed, heartwarming dysfunctional family comedy, POUNDCAKE. Hal Holbrook, Dixie Carter, Walton Goggins, Ray McKinnon, Barry Corbin and Carrie Preston will be in attendance when their Tennessee-made film, THAT EVENING SUN, makes its Southeastern U.S. premiere, as will Michael Parks, Dominique Swain and country stars Lee Ann Womack and Tracy Byrd – all part of directors Dan McMellen and Brett Moses's NOBLE THINGS.


For the fifth year, Nobel Peace Prize winner and former Vice-President of the United States, Al Gore, will present the REEL Current Award to a film screened at NaFF that provides extraordinary insight in a contemporary global issue. Irving Saraf and Allie Light, the filmmakers behind the Academy Award winning documentary IN THE SHADOW OF THE STARS, will be in attendance for the world premiere of their new film EMPRESS HOTEL.


A retrospective screening of EASY RIDER, also celebrating its 40th Anniversary, will close the festival on Thursday, April 23, and be followed by a party at the Cannery Ballroom with Nashville institution The Long Players, who will pay tribute to the music from EASY RIDER.

In total, the 2009 edition of the Nashville Film Festival will include 258 Films from 45 nations and territories.
"I think it's really a testament to the respect that this Festival has earned around the world that we have so many World, U.S. and Southeastern U.S. Premieres," said Sallie Mayne, NaFF executive director. "At the same time, we're committed to the diversity and celebration of this community, with family friendly shorts, two programs of Tennessee films, GLBT shorts, and film programs and receptions for Hispanic and Black filmmakers, to name just a few of our special events and programming."


Film fans who are not able to attend the Festival are encouraged to tune in to NaFFTV at NashvilleFilmFestival.org http://www.nashvillefilmfestival.org each day of the festival for video interviews and recaps of all the Red Carpet and event activities.

A complete list of narrative and documentary features, shorts, and "Music Films/Music City" films is available at NashvilleFilmFestival.org . A complete list of films and events, and a schedule, will be posted to the web site in the weeks ahead. Patron Memberships that includes a Festival Pass can be purchased now at NashvilleFilmFestival.org http://www.nashvillefilmfestival.org. Individual tickets for the 2009 Nashville Film Festival will go on sale online in early April.


MEDIA CREDENTIALS
Members of the media interested in attending the Festival and applying for media credentials should fill out the media credentials request form available in the press room at nashvillefilmfestival.org (http://nashvillefilmfestival.org).


About Nashville Film Festival
The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2007, NaFF’s attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2008, more than 22,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 240 films from 44 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Lawrence Bender, Ray McKinnon, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, and D.A. Pennebaker.

Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, The H. Franklin Brooks Philanthropic Fund, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Frist Foundation, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Ragsdale Family Foundation, Target Stores, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous patrons and sponsors.

 

    

 


 

 March 3, 2009
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Contact: Joe Pagetta
(615) 259-9325 Ext. 211/ jpagetta@wnpt.net

 

Hal Holbrook, Dixie Carter and Lee Ann Womack Join U.S. and World Premieres at 40th Nashville Film Festival

 

Narrative and Documentary Features, REEL Current Award Nominees and Music Films/Music City Also Announced


 
NASHVILLE, Tennessee – March 3, 2009  – Hal Holbrook and Dixie Carter, together with cast mates Walton Goggins, Ray McKinnon, Barry Corbin and Carrie Preston, will be in attendance when their Tennessee-made film, THAT EVENING SUN, makes its Southern United States premiere at the Nashville Film Festival (NaFF), April 16-23, 2009 at Regal Green Hills Cinema.  The film’s director, Scott Teems (Death in the Woods), will also attend. 

Of special interest to country music fans -- and making its Southeastern US premiere at the Festival -- will be directors Dan McMellen and Brett Moses's NOBLE THINGS, in which country superstar Lee Ann Womack makes her feature-film acting debut starring as Chief Deputy Claire Wades. Joining Womack, McMellan and Moses in attendance will be the film's co-stars, Michael Parks and Dominique Swain.
 
Celebrating its 40th Anniversary, the Festival has also announced its lineup of narrative and documentary features that will be in competition, including several World and US premieres and numerous Tennessee premieres. Among narrative features making their US premiere at the Festival are PACHAMAMA (Toshifumi Matsushita, Bolivia, Japan, US) and I WAS HERE (René Vilbre, Estonia). Those making their Southern US premieres include KISSES (Lance Daly, Ireland); MOTHERS & DAUGHTERS (Carl Bessai, Canada); ORDINARY BOYS (Daniel Hernandez, Morocco, Spain); POUNDCAKE (Rafael Monserrate, USA); SORRY, THANKS (Dia Sokol, USA); VACATION (Hajime Kadoi, Japan); WEATHERGIRL (Blayne Weaver, USA): and the previously announced TRUE ADOLESCENTS (Craig Johnson, USA).
 
"I'm proud to say that this year we had a record 1,983 entries from 86 countries," said Brian Owens, NaFF artistic director. "I think the lineup we're close to announcing will reflect the continued commitment to diversity at the Festival, and celebrate the amazing films being made around the world by inspired filmmakers."
 
Four documentary features will make their World Premieres at the Festival and vie in the documentary competition presented by The Documentary Channel: EMPRESS HOTEL, by Oscar winners Irving Saraf and Allie Light, USA; HOUSE OF NUMBERS (Brent Leung, USA); THE OTHER SIDE OF THE LENS (Reed Cowan, USA): and the previously announced WILLIAM SHATNER’S GONZO BALLET (Patrick Buckley, Kevin Layne, USA), which will screen on Friday, April 17 at 7:00 p.m.
 
Documentaries vying for the REEL Current Award, presented by Nobel Peace Prize winner, author and former Vice-President of the United States, Al Gore, to a film screening at NaFF that provides extraordinary insight in a contemporary global issue, are BIG RIVER MAN, (John Maringouin, USA); CRUDE (Joe Berlinger, USA); GARBAGE DREAMS (Mai Iskander, Egypt, USA); and UPSTREAM BATTLE (Ben Kempas, Germany).
 
Owens has also announced the lineup for the popular “Music Films/Music City” category at the Festival. Those films include World Premieres of ANY DAY NOW (Jeff Wyatt Wilson, USA) and THE HEART IS A DRUM MACHINE (Christopher Pomerenke, USA) and the Southeastern US premiere of ROCK PROPHECIES (John Chester, USA). Other highlights include AMERICAN HARMONY (Aengus James, US); AMERICA’S LOST BAND: THE REMAINS (Michael Stich, USA), with The Remains in attendance; ASHES OF AMERICAN FLAGS:  THE WILCO TOUR FILM (Brendan Canty, Christoph Green, USA); and GOGOL BORDELLO:  NON-STOP (Margarita Jimeno, USA).
 
A complete list of narrative and documentary features and "Music Films/Music City" films is available at NashvilleFilmFestival.org. Opening and closing night films, additional highlights, and a complete list of films and events will be announced in the weeks ahead. Patron Memberships that includes a Festival Pass can be purchased now at NashvilleFilmFestival.org
 
Individual tickets for the 2009 Nashville Film Festival will go on sale online at NashvilleFilmFestival.org in early April.


MEDIA CREDENTIALS
 
Members of the media interested in attending the Festival and applying for media credentials should fill out the media credentials request form available in the press room at nashvillefilmfestival.org (http://nashvillefilmfestival.org).
 
The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2007, NaFF’s attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2008, more than 22,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 240 films from 44 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Lawrence Bender, Ray McKinnon, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, and D.A. Pennebaker.
 
About Nashville Film Festival


Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, The H. Franklin Brooks Philanthropic Fund, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Frist Foundation, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Ragsdale Family Foundation, Target Stores, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous patrons and sponsors.
 
# # #

 2009 Press Release
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Updated 2/13/09 to remove the mention of Ben Folds attending this World Premiere. At release time, his attendance was not confirmed. We apologize for any inconvenience this caused.
 

Contact: Joe Pagetta
(615) 259-9325 Ext. 211/ jpagetta@wnpt.net

World Premiere of "William Shatner's Gonzo Ballet" One of Early Highlights of 40th Nashville Film Festival

 

The 40th Anniversary to include notable World and US Premieres, retrospective screenings and a tribute to cult classic "Easy Rider"

 

NASHVILLE, Tennessee-February 11, 2009 (Updated February 13, 2009) -- Star Trek icon and Boston Legal star William Shatner will attend the world premiere of WILLIAM SHATNER'S GONZO BALLET, a film chronicling the quest to create a new ballet based upon Shatner's critically acclaimed album, Has Been, when the Nashville Film Festival (NaFF) takes place April 16-23, 2009 at Regal Green Hills Cinema.


Celebrating its 40th Anniversary, the Festival will include several world premieres, among them FLYING BY by director Jim Amatulli, starring Billy Ray Cyrus, Heather Locklear, Olesya Rulin (High School Musical) and 2008 NaFF Lifetime Achievement recipient Patricia Neal, and the documentary THE OTHER SIDE OF THE LENS by Reed Cowan (USA). Joining a multitude of US and Southeastern US premieres will be a special screening of a restored print of the classic film EASY RIDER, starring Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper, which also celebrates its 40th anniversary.


Festivalgoers will also be privy to early festival-circuit showings of TRUE ADOLESCENTS (Craig Johnson, USA), starring Academy Award nominee for Best Actress, Melissa Leo, and THAT EVENING SUN, filmed in Tennessee and starring Academy Award winner Hal Holbrook, with Ray McKinnon, Walton Goggins, Dixie Carter and Mia Wasikowska ("Alice" in Tim Burton's upcoming adaptation of Alice in Wonderland).


"It's astounding to me that the longest-running film festival in the South is now 40-years-old, and we're still growing," said Sallie Mayne, NaFF Executive Director. "We said last year -- after smashing all previous attendance records -- the only way we could grow was by adding additional theatres. Now with two additional theatres, we'll be able to celebrate our 40th Anniversary, and better serve festivalgoers, with more films, more events and more screenings.”


To mark the Festival's 40th Anniversary, artistic director Brian Owens has programmed a special retrospective of notable films that have screened at the Festival back to its days as The Sinking Creek Film Celebration. Included in the retrospective are NIGHT ON EARTH (Jim Jarmusch, Germany, 1991), CLERKS (Kevin Smith, USA, 1994), Burden of Dreams (Les Blank, Netherland, 1982) and Crumb (Terry Zwigoff, USA, 1994).


"This is a festival built on 40 years of dedication to both the craft of filmmaking and the diverse interests of this community," said Owens, who is programming the Festival for the first time. "I'm thankful for the opportunity to program the Festival, and what a fantastic year to do it, when I can honor both its past and present commitment to great film.”


WILLIAM SHATNER'S GONZO BALLET, directed by Patrick Buckley and Kevin Layne, chronicles famed choreographer Margo Sappington's quest to create a new ballet based upon Emmy and Golden Globe award-winner Shatner's critically acclaimed album, Has Been. Produced by Ben Folds and recorded in Nashville, the album includes songs co-written by Shatner and contributions from Folds, Henry Rollins, Joe Jackson, Aimee Mann and country superstar, Brad Paisley. The completed ballet, "Common People," set to six songs from "Has Been," was captured on film when it debuted in 2007 with the Milwaukee Ballet.


Other notable documentary screenings at this year's Festival include the US premieres of EMPRESS HOTEL (Allie Light, Irving Saraf, USA) and CITIZEN JULING (Kraisak Choonhavan, Ing K, Manit Sriwanichpoom, Thailand), and the Tennessee premiere of director Kimberly Reed's PRODIGAL SON (USA).


Narrative features in competition include AFTERSCHOOL, by director Antonio Campos (USA), which stars Paul Sparks, Rosemarie DeWitt, Emory Cohen and Ezra Miller. It will make its Tennessee premiere with Campos in attendance.


Opening and closing night films, additional highlights, and a complete list of films and events will be announced in the weeks ahead. Patron Memberships that includes a Festival Pass can be purchased now at NashvilleFilmFestival.org.
Individual tickets for the 2009 Nashville Film Festival will go on sale online at NashvilleFilmFestival.org in early April.


MEDIA CREDENTIALS
Members of the media interested in attending the Festival and applying for media credentials should fill out the media credentials request form available in the press room at nashvillefilmfestival.org (http://nashvillefilmfestival.org).
The longest-running film festival in the South, NaFF also ranks among the most prestigious, continually garnering accolades and notice from a wide range of entertainment and trade publications, including the Associated Press, MovieMaker Magazine, Film Festival Today, IndieWire, Variety, Billboard, New York and Script Magazine. Between 2003 and 2007, NaFF’s attendance numbers doubled, capped off with a staggering 26% increase in festival goers between 2006 and 2007. In 2008, more than 22,000 film lovers, entertainment professionals and industry insiders from all over the world made the trek to NaFF, enjoying 240 films from 44 countries, incisive industry panels, music showcases and spirited party mixers. Among the diverse group of celebrities who have attended NaFF in the past either as film presenters, award recipients or film fans are William H. Macy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Patricia Neal, Rob Thomas, Lawrence Bender, Ray McKinnon, Walton Goggins, Craig Brewer, Harmony Korine, Al Gore, Nicole Kidman, Kiefer Sutherland, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, Peter Falk, Paul Reiser, Patrick Swayze, Rick Schroder, John Waters, Matthew McConaughey, Robert Redford, Harry Belafonte, Oprah Winfrey, Michael Moore, and D.A. Pennebaker.


About Nashville Film Festival
Nashville Film Festival is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation and receives funding from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, The H. Franklin Brooks Philanthropic Fund, William N. Rollins Fund for the Arts of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, The Frist Foundation, The Memorial Foundation, Nashville Metro Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, Ragsdale Family Foundation, Target Stores, Tennessee Arts Commission, and its generous patrons and sponsors.


# # #


Joe Pagetta - Media Relations Manager - Nashville Public Television - Nashville Film Festival
(office) 615.259.9325 ext. 211 - (cell) 615.473.2074 - jpagetta@wnpt.net
http://www.wnpt.net - http://www.npt08.wordpress.com (the NPT Media Update Blog)



 



 

Mayor Karl Dean and William H. Macy at Opening Night film "The Deal"

Nashville Film Festival

PRESS ROOM


History of Nashville Film Festival (NaFF)

 

Read 2007 NaFF CLOSING REPORT

 

 


2008 Press Releases 

 

Update 9/24/08: Special guests scheduled to attend inclue soundtrack artists Josh Turner (who plays George Beverly Shea), Brandon Heath, China Edelman, Armie Hammer (Billy), Stefanie Butler (Ruth Bell Graham), Kristoffer Polaha (young Charles Templeton), Anastasia Brown (executive producer and soundtrack album producer) and George Beverly Shea.

 

Brian Owens Named Nashville Film Festival Artistic Director (8/27/08)

 

Nashville Film Festival 2009 Call for Entries / Al Gore Reel Current Award Continues (8/01/08)

 


Nashville Film Festival Wraps with Patricia Neal, William H. Macy, Al Gore, Vincent D’Onofrio, Big Kenny and More;  Box Office Breaks Records While “Two Embraces,” “Shake the Devil Off,” “Cook County” and “Sons of Lwala” Win Big (4/24/08)


Al Gore Presents the Reel Current Award to Michael O'Connell's MOUNTAIN TOP REMOVAL at Nashville Film Festival /  Plus: LGBT Award splits; Trace Adkins to attend "Terror;" Dennis Lambert adds a showcase; Patricia Neal to sign books; and more of the latest happenings at the Nashville Film Festival(4/19/08)

 

Al Gore Names Mountain Top Removal 2008 Reel Current Award Winner at Nashville Film Festival (4/11/08)

 

 

Nashville Film Festival Announces Complete 2008 Lineup, Premieres, Panels and Special Guests (4/3/08)

 

Sons of Lwala Named 2008 NPT Human Spirit Award Winner (4/1/08)

 

William H. Macy to Attend Nashville Film Festival Opening Night Screening of "The Deal" (3/18/08)

"The Deal," Starring William H. Macy and Meg Ryan, to open 39th Nashville Film Festival / Highlights of April 17-24 Festival to include a Patricia Neal Lifetime Achievement Award and "Wrecking Crew" on closing night (3/6/08)

Nashville Film Festival Presents a Special Screening Of the New John Sayles Film "Honeydripper" Starring Danny Glover And Charles S. Dutton / Glover to Attend and Take Part in a Post-Screening Q&A
(2/1/08)

Nashville Film Festival Announces 2008 Dates (12/27/07)

 

 
For 2007 Press Releases, Please Visit the Press Archive

 

2008 News

4/24/08

 

Top Awards Announced for the Nashville Film Festival (Nashville City Paper)
4/24/08 Successful Film Festival Draws to a Close Today (Tennessean)
4/22/08  "Rhinestone Cowboy" producer honored in film (GACTV.com)
4/21/08 Patricia Neal to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award (AP/USA Today)
4/21/08 William H. Macy's "The Deal" Opens 2008 Nashville Film Festival (Belmont Vision)
4/20/08 Trace Adkins Shocked by his Own Movie (GACTV.com)
4/19/08 Nashville Film Festival Helps Shape City's Image (WKRN)
4/20/08 Nashville: Nicer Than All Get Out (Variety.com/The Circuit)
4/18/08

Nashville City Paper
-
No shortage of compelling material at Nashville Film Festival
- Critics, celebrities attend festival workshops
- Film festival honors African-American filmmakers

4/18/08 Little Films Generate Big Dreams (Tennessean/Williamson A.M.)
4/16/08 Reel Nashville (Nashville Scene)
4/17/08 Short Films Bring The World Home at Nashville Film Festival (All the Rage)
4/17/08 Nashville Film Festival Shines A Light on Spirituality, Religion (Tennessean)
4/16/08 Big Kenny Premieres Sudan Documentary at Film Festival Here (Tennessean)
4/14/08 Nashville Film Festival kicks off Thursday, offers something for everyone (Murfreesboro Post)
4/15/08 William H. Macy brings new movie, 'The Deal,' to Nashville Film Festival  (The Tennessean)
4/13/08 Patricia Neal takes a bow at Nashville Film Fest (Tennessean)
4/11/08 Environmental Issues Come Into Focus at Nashville Film Festival (Tennessean)
4/11/08 Nashville Film Festival's Brian Gordon the Featured Guest on All Things Nashville (All Things Nashville)
3/7/08 Nashville Announces Opener and Closer (Variety.com/The Circuit)
3/6/08 NaFF '08: Criminal Intent (NashvilleScene.com)
3/6/08 Nashville Honoring Neal (Pickle Dish/KnoxNews.com)
3/3/08 NaFF '08: Chillin' With Werner Herzog (NashvilleScene.com)
2/28/08 Ready to Roll: Upcoming Nashville Film Festival offers a peek (Nashville Scene)
  For the complete 2007 News Listing, Please visit the Press Archive
 

Publicity Coordinator
Joe Pagetta
615-259-9325 ext. 211

jpagetta[at]wnpt.net


 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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