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CinevegasFilmFestival Tagged Articles at Cinematical

CineVegas Film Festival Winners Announced

Filed under: Independent », Awards », DIY/Filmmaking », CineVegas »

Last week, I did some reporting from the CineVegas Film Festival, where I served as a juror. The winners were announced this weekend, and they have me wishing I had been able to see more stuff. She Unfolds By Day, Rolf Belgum's film about "a frustrated middle-aged son trying to manage his misanthropic 80-year-old mother," took home the Grand Jury Prize. A Special Jury Award went to Dark Streets, which our own Eric D. Snider gave a decent review to here. Bill Pullman took home a Special Jury Award for his performance in Your Name Here, reviewed by Eric here. The documentary jury, which included Super Size Me director Morgan Spurlock, selected Beautiful Losers, about "the lives of a loose-knit group of artists in the '80s who created their own art movement outside the mainstream." Hi, My Name is Ryan, focusing on "the clown prince of the downtown Phoenix art scene," picked up a Special Documentary Jury Prize.

Live from CineVegas: Know When to Fold 'Em

Filed under: Independent », DIY/Filmmaking », CineVegas »

Finished with my jury responsibilities, I managed to check out some features. A favorite of mine was Chelsea on the Rocks, by Abel Ferrara (director of Bad Lieutenant and a terrific little mob flick called The Funeral). It's a documentary about the infamous Chelsea Hotel in Manhattan, but it's far from traditional. There are lots of odd transitions and edits, the interviews are beyond casual (Ferrara says something along the lines of "No shit!" every ten seconds while listening to the stories of those living in the building), and there are some utterly ridiculous and unnecessary re-enactments of notorious events in the hotel's past (actors play Sid and Nancy, Janis Joplin, and assorted hangers-on). Truth be told, the whole thing was kind of a mess. But watching it felt a lot like spending a night in the hotel, and it's a ride I'm glad I took. I didn't learn a thing, but it brought me inside a place full of fascinating characters, a place I walked past countless times in Manhattan without a second thought.

Discuss: Dwayne Johnson, Philanthropist

Filed under: Documentary », Foreign Language », Independent », Celebrities and Controversy », Fandom », DIY/Filmmaking », Politics », CineVegas »



There's no way around it: Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson owes at least some of his fame to the way his dominating figure fits the blockbuster action stereotype with near-mechanical sleekness. However, he also offers an alternative to that reductive perspective. Looking sharp in a business suit and speaking with the relaxed professional discipline of a CEO, Johnson showed up at a screening of Get Smart on Sunday at the CineVegas Film Festival displaying sheer confidence. The screening took place at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino, where Johnson had recently acted in Race to Witch Mountain ("We just added to the chaos," he said), but on this visit, Johnson got a chance to remind people that he's not just a one-note performer, but someone who plays an active role in the international film community (not to mention the health community, since The Rock Foundation pushes obesity prevention).

Outside of his supremely meta performance in Richard Kelly's Southland Tales, Johnson has made his interests in adventurous cinema increasingly clear, and boldly champions independent artists. You can get a small glimpse of this aspect of his personality in Operation Filmmaker, documentarian Nina Davenport's account of an Iraqi filmmaker named Muthana Mohmed whose aspirations tragically fall short of the expectations surrounding him. Landing the opportunity to work for Liev Schreiber on the set of Everything is Illuminated, the 25-year-old Mohmed grows increasingly frustrated with the boring tasks given to him, and continually blows opportunities as a result of his unbalanced work ethic.

CineVegas and Dennis Hopper Want to See YOUR Vacation Films

Filed under: Shorts », Contests », Other Festivals »

The CineVegas Film Festival will hold its 10th annual event next June, and the programmers want to help YOU, John and Jane Q. Public, participate in the festivities. Submit your own short travel-related film and you could win a trip to Vegas and $5,000! That's enough to justify going to Las Vegas in June, which is sort of like going to the North Pole in January.

The contest, called "Trip Takes," is co-sponsored by Condé Nast Traveler, the glossy magazine designed to make you wish you were rich so you could go on all the luxurious trips featured in its pages. The basic rules are that the film must be wholly original, less than five minutes long, and "capture the power of travel."

You submit your films at the "Trip Takes" site, and then the CineVegas jury will choose five finalists. Those five will be flown to Vegas during next June's fest, where the jury will pick a top winner, and so will the audience. Jury pick gets $5,000, and the audience pick gets $2,500. Heck, make a film so awesome that both jury and audience love it, and I guess you get both prizes.

Now, I think this is important: Dennis Hopper is on the CineVegas advisory board, and he'll be part of the jury. So all you have to do is make a film that would appeal to Dennis Hopper. Start with crazy, then go a little crazier. You can't go wrong!

The deadline is Feb. 28, so get to work!

[Via Thompson on Hollywood.]
 
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