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Highlights of the 4th Annual Port Townsend Film
Festival
As they say in the trade, the fourth annual Port
Townsend Film Festival is a "wrap." Some of the memorable
moments:
- MDM/TCM Announcement
Of major interest to Port Townsend festival-goers
was the opening night announcement that Millennium Digital Media
(MDM), the local cable television provider, is bringing Turner
Classic Movies (TCM) back into its line-up in late October. A
considerable stir was caused among television movie watchers in
early summer when MDM discontinued the popular movie channel,
hosted by Robert Osborne, who, along with TCM, has been a
long-time supporter of the Port Townsend Film Festival.
Audiences cheered when the announcement was made simultaneously
at each venue. (Note to festival-goers: an email of thanks for
their reuniting and for each company's support of the film
festival would be appreciated: Mary Meier at MDM [mmeier@mdm.net] and Tom Karsch
at TCM [tom.karsch@turner.com].)
- Awards
For the first time, the Port Townsend Film
Festival issued awards. John O'Brien's sweet-natured feature
film about suburban dwellers who move to rural Vermont, Nosey
Parker, was named best feature film. Best documentary was Paul
Devlin's Power Trip, the chaotic story of an American utility
company that buys the state-owned utility company in the former
Soviet Republic of Georgia and attempts to turn it from a
socialist operation into a capitalist enterprise. The best short
subject prize was awarded to the 16-minute Brazilian Zagati, an
exploration of how the art of cinema creates great men, by
directors Edu Felistoque and Nereu Cerdeira. And the
unofficially-declared "audience favorite" was the international
production, Corazon de fuego (The Last Train) by director Diego
Arsuaga.
- Music on Taylor Street
People who attend the Port Townsend Film Festival
often remark how much fun standing in line is. No kidding. They
get to talk to people about movies, run into friends they
haven't seen for a while, or meet new people with a weekend in
common. For less gregarious souls, a diverse line-up of
musicians was available on Taylor Street this year to add to the
block party ambiance of the festival. Show tunes and movie
themes were interspersed with a clarinet quartet, an
Afro-Caribbean drum ensemble, a seven-piece string band, lively
Zimbabwean music, ariel style bas, acoustic groove, a sax
quartet, country blues and ragtime, and a 19-member swing band
to close on Sunday before the last outdoor movie.
- Second Annual Film 2880
2880, as it has become known, exists to challenge
the resourcefulness and creativity of local and international
filmmakers, film students, and anyone crazy enough to sign up to
make a film in 2880 minutes, or 48 hours. Thirty-five films from
Puerto Rico, Hong Kong, and the States were made by teams who
wrote, shot, and edited a 5- to 10-minute short film given only
a theme (passion), a prop (strainer), and a line of dialogue
("That bug's on a suicide mission.") The top three winners were:
1st Place: Gondor's Cup, by Johnny Broderson, 2nd Place: Die
Bugs! Die!!!, by Raffaele Riconosciuto, 3rd Place: Going, Going,
Gahan, by Johnny Seattle. For a listing of the top ten winners,
log on to http://www.film2880.com/.
- The Adventures of Priscilla and two former Port Townsend
mayors
Laid-back Port Townsend loves a reason to dress
up, particularly in costume, and its citizens had another
opportunity Saturday night at the Almost-Midnight movie, the
1994 Australian camp classic, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen
of the Desert. Several dozen men (and women) arrived in drag,
including former mayors Brent Shirley and John Clise. (And, yes,
they would have done it if they were still in office!) It was
indeed a campy night on the desert-by-the-sea.
- The review in the Seattle Times (Sept. 30, 2003)
The Times' movie critic, Moira Macdonald, has long
been a friend of PTFF and she extended her friendship with a
smashing review. Her opening paragraph reads: "Last Saturday,
after dark but with a gentle warmth still in the air, you could
stand at the top of the historic outdoor staircase above
downtown, look down at a massive movie screen on Tyler (Taylor)
street, and see the flawless upturned faces of Audrey Hepburn
and Gregory Peck in "Roman Holiday," as high as a building and
as clear as the star-flecked sky. If movie moments come any
better than this -- well, bring them on. " And it goes on from
there.
- The appearance of Peter Fonda, Verna Bloom, and Shirley
Knight and the largest number of filmmakers ever assembled at this
festival
Quoting Macdonald's article in the Seattle Times:
" . . . Fonda gave a spirited introduction to a screening of his
trademark 1969 film, Easy Rider, . . .. 'We were totally unaware
that the bike would become an icon . . . that I would become an
icon,' he said, still sounding genuinely amazed." For his
discussion of The Hired Hand on Friday night, he was joined by
co-star and a surprise appearance by Richard Bruno, the film's
costume designer.
The festival's guest of honor, Shirley Knight,
screened her rarely-seen 1966 film, Dutchman, in which she plays
an "apple-chomping siren who taunts a young black man in a
subway car. " Macdonald, in her Times review, continued "'Wasn't
that woman scary?" Knight asked the audience, confessing that
she hadn't sen the film in a while, and that she couldn't eat
apples for two years after making it."
John O'Brien, director of the winning feature,
Nosey Parker, graciously accepted his honor before the closing
night film. Sundance Channel's forthcoming theatrical feature,
Dopamine, brought producer Eric Koivisto, director Mark Decena,
and star John Livingston to discuss their first
feature.
Other feature and documentary filmmakers in
attendance included: producer Richard Baumgartel, The Burial
Society, from Canada; producer Brian McCormick, Sexless; Riley
Morton, Found on Everest; director Laszlo Pal and his producer
wife, Susan Pal, of Alone Against the Sea: The Dangers of Solo
Sailing; director/producer Robert Lundahl, Unconquering the Last
Frontier; director/writer/producer, dirctor/writer/producer
Teddy Grouya of Why Vivaldi?; Randy Nargi, director of G-Sale;
Brian Burroughs brought two improvizational documentaries,
Suckerfish and Security, director/producer/writer Scott Macklin,
Tribal Journey: Celebrating Our Ancestors. Makers of short film
in attendance included Patricia O'Brian, director/ producer/
editor of Toxic Gardens; Ian Hinkle,
director/producer/cinematographer of The Living Coast; Lucy
Ostrander, director/producer of The Red Pines; Gina Mainwal,
director/writer/producer of Signed, Stamped, Dated: The Story of
the Typing Explosion; Jane Champion, director/producer/editor of
Just a Little Scared; Mark Hager, director/writer, The Field;
Ross Williams, eRATicate; Vance Malone, director/editor of
Ocularist. The filmmaker coming the farthest was director Shane
Conaty who traveled from Ireland to attend the world premiere
his 11-minute drama, Easy Street.
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