Depression Era Decadence Captured On Film
EMBARGOED UNTIL FRIDAY 7TH OCTOBER 2011
Depression Era Decadence Captured On
Film
Adventure, eroticism, decadence and culinary delights populate this year’s harvest of the best short films from New Zealand and abroad.
The programme for the sixth
annual Show Me Shorts Film Festival was announced last
night, and Festival Director Gina Dellabarca drew parallels
to depression era escapism pictures, saying: “These films
capture a snap-shot of the state of mind of New Zealand and
international artists in the last year. A sort-of
‘temperature-taking’ of the nation and the world, if you
allow that our artists and story tellers capture the kinds
of stories we demand.”
The 47 films in this year’s
programme, selected from hundreds of entries, will be
divided up for screening into seven themed sessions: Master
Chef, Unlikely Bedfellows, Small Pleasures, Unexpected
Adventure, Love You to Death, Extreme Measures and Hitting
the Road. For the first time this year, Show Me Shorts will
screen international films from outside of New Zealand and
Australia. The international line-up has been added in
response to audience demand and includes films from France,
UK, Germany/South Africa, Ireland and the USA.
Local
highlights include internationally award winning ‘Blue’
by Stephen Kang, which screened at Cannes this year, and the
first short film by Tammy Davis (Outrageous Fortune’s
Munter) ‘Ebony Society’, which featured at this year’s
Sundance and Berlin festivals. Previous Show Me Shorts Best
Film winner Jackie van Beek is back with a new film this
year ‘Go the Dogs’, shot in Australia. Programming
assistance from Kerry Film Festival in Ireland led to the
inclusion of two Irish shorts: comedy ‘Cold Turkey’ and
romantic drama ‘Crossword.’ Melbourne International Film
Festival also recommended several Australian shorts
including a cross dressing comedy and an animated road
movie.
Auckland filmmakers shine, supplying over a
quarter of the selected films. Dellabarca particularly
recommends ‘Plimpton’ a bittersweet relationship drama
set through the recognisable streets of inner city Auckland,
and ‘Last Flight’ about an astronaut stranded on another
world.
The Show Me Shorts awards for 2011 will be
announced at the Opening & Awards night on Thursday 3
November at the Capitol Cinema in Auckland. Previous winners
have included Jacki van Beek, Phill Simmonds, Matthew
Sunderland, Kate McDermott, Cameron Rhodes, James
Cunningham, Mark Albiston & Louis Sutherland. The awards
will be decided by a panel of experienced industry judges
including producer Catherine Fitzgerald (The Orator, Two
Cars One Night). Tickets for this event are available to the
public and include screenings of the award winning
films.
Show Me Shorts expands to twelve locations
nationwide this year. Auckland venues open 3 November and
will move to the recently renovated Capitol Cinema on
Dominion Road, and Northcote’s Bridgeway Cinema. Cinemas
in Waiheke Island and Matakana also return to the festival.
Tauranga, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin locations
begin on 10 November and the remaining smaller regional
locations follow from 17 November.
Six participants
have also been announced for the Short Film Lab. Selected
from over 60 applicants, the participants in the 2011 Short
Film Lab are: Jodie Hillock, Adam Harvey, Rebecca Barnes,
Troy Blackman, Kelly Hunt, and Nic Sampson. A joint venture
between Script to Screen and Show Me Shorts, the Short Film
Lab builds on the overwhelming success of the inaugural
Short Film Lab in 2010, which assisted six short film
makers. Two of these (Lauren Jackson and Renae Maihi) went
on to secure funding from NZFC's Fresh Shorts scheme this
year. This lab is inspired by labs run by major A-list film
festivals such as Sundance and has been made possible thanks
to support from NZFC and the University of
Auckland.
For the full Show Me Shorts programme,
schedules and other information visit the official website
www.showmeshorts.co.nz.
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