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look over here, on the big screen
Written by Nick Gosling
Wednesday, 12 October 2005
Read
the article on The Wire web site
This weekend, filmmakers, potential filmmakers, film junkies,
actors, wannabe actors, and critics will converge on Portsmouth
to partake in the fifth annual New Hampshire Film Expo.
Out of more than 50 movies to be shown, one-third will be
from New Hampshire filmmakers. The tales they have to tell
include those of a college student casino operator; a mythical
swamp cat from the South Berwick area; a West African musician;
a world-class skier; and a bridge-dwelling troll with a
reputation for scaring a band of billy goats.The not-for-profit
and volunteer-driven expo, which runs Oct. 14-16, is created
and staffed entirely by local filmmakers and fans of independent
film.
“It speaks for what filmmaking is all about in New
Hampshire,” says Matthew Newton, film specialist for
the New Hampshire Film and Television Office. “The
filmmakers (and volunteers) who run the festival are very
well-versed in Yankee ingenuity, where they have a day job,
then come home to do their filmmaking in the evening.”
As the festival enters its fifth year and its second year
in Portsmouth, Chris Proulx, a co-founder of the expo and
current programming director, has seen the event “more
than double” since its inception in Derry. This year
the festival will screen 51 submissions from international,
national and New England filmmakers. “(We look) for
films that are well done, appealing to the audience, that
have potential quality, and where they come from. We also
try and give New Hampshire filmmakers a leg up on their
films,” Proulx says.
The event is about more than screening films. It’s
also about making them, about getting filmmakers together
and facilitating discussion.
This year Proulx and the other NHFX board members have kept
busy fine tuning the event, including adding an Internet
café at the hospitality suite of their headquarters
at the IOS Business Lobby at 155 Fleet St., around the corner
from The Music Hall. The workshops this year have also changed
to include a panel discussion called “Festivals 101”
on Saturday at The Music Hall. The panel will be made up
of three film festival coordinators, including the directors
of the Philadelphia Film Festival, the Manhattan Shorts
Film Festival, and NHFX’s own director of development
Nicole Gregg. A roundtable on “Filmmaking in New Hampshire”
will take place on Saturday at the South Church on State
Street with the production team of “Sensation of Sight”
and the co-writer/director of “Live Free or Die,”
Andy Robin, a former Saturday Night Live and Seinfeld writer.
“Live Free or Die” filmed in New Hampshire for
several weeks.“Every year with the workshops we try
and offer something different,” Proulx says. “We
provide different aspects of filmmaking from acting to digital
editing to writing workshops.”
Other workshops on the schedule include a writing workshop
to explore the “What if’s” about questions
that might be asked by studio development heads when you
make your pitch (Saturday, IOS Business Center), and a workshop
on editing technique by Keene State College film professor
James Steelman (Sunday, IOS Business Center). A Young Filmmakers
Workshop allows junior high and high school students to
learn about the process and methods of filmmaking including
scripting, storyboarding, production planning, cinematography
and other vital aspects of creating films. As part of the
workshop, they will film and edit their own movies, which
will premiere on Sunday at the NHFX closing ceremonies before
an audience of parents, friends, directors and producers.
Holding a film festival like NHFX is also a great way to
show filmmakers and actors from other regions of the country
that larger budget films are possible in New Hampshire.
Gregg says the New Hampshire roundtable on Saturday is an
educational presentation for both in-state and out-of-state
filmmakers. “It’s important for people coming
from out-of-town to New Hampshire to know what is going
on here,” she says. “(The event) is also to
educate our own filmmakers on potential opportunities. They
will know it’s possible to create a film of a million
dollar budget or more in New Hampshire.” In turn,
these productions will feed our economy and industry by
hiring local people, Gregg says. “They help cultivate
a future in New Hampshire for film productions,” she
says. “Hopefully when people shoot a film here they
will want to keep coming back.”
Portions of the Bode Miller documentary “Flying Downhill”
will screen on Saturday at The Music Hall. The documentary
follows the New Hampshire native now known as the best ski
racer in the world, says Bill Rodgers, executive director
and co-founder of Coruway Film Institute, the Portsmouth
based company producing the film. Rodgers has been shooting
footage since 1999 and traveled to the 2002 Olympics and
several World Cup Races to film Bode. “The film is
about where (Miller) comes from and what makes him tick,”
says Rodgers. “The film follows the process as he
becomes a great ski racer.”
Rodgers is using the film festival as an opportunity to
show the rough cut of the documentary, which will lack a
complete sound mix and some bits and pieces from recent
interviews with Bode. He plans to premiere “Flying
Downhill” itself at the Banff Mountain Film Festival
in Alberta, Canada, on Nov. 4.
“To have a community of filmmakers and a place to
show the films is dynamite,” says Rodgers, a New Hampshire
resident for 15 years now. “A festival like this helps
you translate the needs of the audience with the vision
I’m trying to develop.”
Like Rodgers, many of these filmmakers will be attending
the festival.
Filmmaker Stefan Glidden of Rochester will be on hand for
“S. Katz V.P.” at The Music Hall on Friday evening,
a night completely devoted to films by New Hampshire filmmakers.
Glidden, a recent graduate from Boston University, wrote
and submitted the comedy as his senior thesis. The story
is of a college student who runs his own casino until he
faces competition from a rival student casino. The film
was written by Glidden in December 2004. He shot the footage
for the movie in five days using actors from BU and other
Boston colleges.
“We were shooting till 5 a.m. one day,” says
Glidden. “And we had to get ready to shoot at 7 that
morning.” Still, it feels good to fulfill a dream
he’s had since seventh grade. “(The film) is
a stepping stone, a block toward what I’m going to
do next,” he says. Glidden, 21, already has plans
to move to Los Angeles this winter and continue to make
films.
Stephanie Higgins, an alumna of the University of New Hampshire,
will be present for “The Gay Marriage Thing,”
on Saturday. Her film, a documentary about gay marriages
in Massachusetts, was prompted by the 2004 constitutional
convention during which the state Legislature debated gay
marriage.
“I decided that morning (of the debate) to go down
and sit in the gallery to listen to a debate about my life,
as a gay person,” says Higgins. “A debate about
whether someday I could marry the woman of my dreams.”
Struck by the emotion of the debate, she decided to return
with a camera crew when the convention reconvened several
weeks later. Using interviews from people on the street,
religious leaders, and legislators, Higgins centered her
documentary around a Massachusetts lesbian couple as they
prepared for marriage on May 17, 2004, the first date that
same-sex couples could file for marriage. Higgins captures
opinions on both sides of the argument. She calls the piece
family friendly, a film that people of different beliefs
and perspectives can watch together and which will promote
discussion. “Nobody’s insulted in the piece
and nobody will feel insulted when leaving,” says
Higgins. “These festivals are so important to introducing
people to topics and films they might not see.”
Higgins has been in the film industry for five years and
started her own production company, Sassy-Media, in 2003.
She believes that events like NHFX are important to telling
the stories of small-time filmmakers.
“There are so many stories that matter that don’t
get told in the mass media,” she says. “These
festivals encourage people to keep working on these stories
and encourage them to get their films shown to larger audiences.”
Founder and director of Hatchling Studios, Marc Dole, who
originally began experimenting with production and animation
in his Newmarket garage, will present a behind-the-scenes
look at his company’s near-complete animated short
feature, “The Toll.” The film, called “Loose
Change,” will show how the Pixar-style 3-D animation
in “The Toll” was created, how actors dubbed
in voices, and quick clips of the animation short. “The
Toll” tells the tale of a film student who interviews
the troll who lives under the bridge that the Billy Goats
Gruff try to pass over. “(He) makes all the typical
student film director mistakes,” says Dole. “Stuff
like bumping into the microphone.”
So far it has taken Dole and his crew of five animators
18 months to complete 13 seconds of the five-minute film,
but most of that was preparation for the animation. “Next
week we will have one minute done because all the prep work
is completed,” he says. Dole is using the short to
show off what the five-year-old company is capable of to
potential investors. His goal is to produce feature animations,
including the story of “Flare,” an original
feature-length film about a little girl who finds a baby
dragon in her backyard.
Eleven-year-old Savannah Magruder of South Berwick, Maine,
will be there to see “Swampcat” on Saturday
at the Sheraton Amphitheater. Her short film, which she
calls a mixture of comedy and horror, is about a fictional
creature that lives in a swamp and has become the stuff
of legend to the locals who fear it. Magruder invented the
creature on a hike with her dad through a swampy area, and
her father, Chris Magruder, encouraged her to make a movie
about it.
“It just seemed like a good idea,” she says
about the film. “Anytime I come up with a good idea
I’m eager to start making it.”
Magruder has made over 20 movies with a video camera she
received from her parents last Christmas. The films range
widely, many of them shot with the help of her friends.
One such series of films, called “Imbeciles of America,”
follows a man whose ridiculous adventures become the theme
of each of the 10 movies Savannah created about him. “Every
episode has something stupid that he does and I focus it
around that,” she says. The majority of Savannah’s
films are done with dolls, most commonly the Bratz series
dolls.
“Swampcat” took one month for her and her father
to put together. The hardest part was recording the theme
music for the film, which Chris provides with electric bass
and vocals. The West African and classical music of Tunde
Jegede is the focus of Ron Wyman’s documentary, “Tunde.”
Wyman, a Portsmouth resident, has been working on the piece
for a year and a half now, traveling to Africa four times
and London five times to shoot footage of Tunde and of other
traditional African musicians. Tunde, a native of West Africa
and master kora (African harp) player, studied classical
music in London. His compositions have dealt with the fusion
of African music and primarily western music like jazz,
hip-hop and classical.
“His music is what drew me in, it’s so compelling,”
says Wyman. “The piece is about him and his creative
process.” Wyman shows Tunde in rehearsals in London,
mixed with footage of African musicians playing and living
in their West African villages. The film finishes with Tunde
and other musicians playing before a live audience in Paris.
“I call him the Jerry Garcia of the kora,” Wyman
says.
To Wyman, a film festival like NHFX represents the evolution
of technology and ease of opportunity for small-time artists
to create high quality films.
“(Digital cameras) really opened it up to artists,”
says Wyman. “The festival really acknowledges the
very talented people who never really had an opportunity
before because of cost. The tools now are available and
affordable to everybody who wants to make movies.”
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