Take Three

Inwood Art Works proudly announces the programming for its third annual Inwood Film Festival!  The festival will expand to show twenty-four short and feature films in nine screenings from March 15-17 at the Campbell Sports Center located in Inwood at 218th Street and Broadway.  The festival includes a special Opening Night Benefit on March 15 featuring a special historical program tracing the roots of “Hollywood in Inwood”, Inwood Film Festival Select Shorts, and local filmmakers interviewed by WNYC’s Brian Lehrer.

The focus of Inwood Film Festival is to celebrate and showcase Inwood and its surrounding community through the moving image.  It is created to be a homegrown community platform to promote and celebrate the neighborhood of Inwood and its residents.  All films submitted to the Inwood Film Festival are shot in Inwood or its surrounding community or made by past or present residents of Inwood or from its surrounding community.  Everyone from amateurs to Oscar winners are encouraged to participate by submitting films shot in the Inwood community, or by Inwood community filmmakers.   The Inwood Film Festivalis produced by Inwood Art Works, Aaron Simms, Executive Producer.

TICKETING

$15 Single Tickets to each individual screening.

$50 Festival Pass – all access pass to all screenings March 16 and 17.

$75 Benefit Ticket – admission to Opening Night Benefit on March 15

$105 Benefit Ticket & Festival Pass – admission to Opening Night Benefit on March 15, and all access pass to all screenings March 16 & 17.

 

*Special discount for local students.  Email info@inwoodartworks for promo code and attach proof of current valid ID.

All tickets can be purchased through www.inwoodartworks.nyc or www.2018inwoodfilmfestival.eventbrite.com

There will be a waiting list at the door for each screening, as all shows are expected to sell out.

LOCATION

CAMPBELL SPORTS CENTER

505 West 218th Street

New York, NY 10034

$75 Benefit Ticket – admission to Opening Night Benefit on March 15

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EXHIBITION SCHEDULE

Thursday, March 15

 

Opening Night Benefit

 

Thursday, March 15 – 6:30-9:30pm

Special presentation featuring:  A History of “Hollywood” in InwoodIFF Select ShortsFilmmaker Interview with Brian Lehrer, and delicious appetizers and beverages by Indian Road Café.  $75 pre-purchase.  $100 day-of, and at the door, if space allows. Tickets can be purchased at www.2018inwoodfilmfestival.eventbrite.com or at www.inwoodartworks.nyc

 

Friday, March 16

 

Short Shorts

<5 min. Shorts Exhibition –  40 minutes – Friday, March 16, 2:05pm

Featuring:  The Race (Student Film), My Head, Horror in the Heights, Start Small Think Big, Hechas en Mexico, The 3rd Try, May 22, 2012.  Featuring a post-screening conversation with filmmakers.                

 

Long Shorts: Documentary Portraits

<25 min. Shorts Exhibition –  Friday, March 16 at 7:00pm –  51 minutes

Featuring:  Harv, On Some Strange Mornings, Pablo Caviedes – On the Map, For the Birds

 

Brief Reunion Friday, March 16 at 8:15pm –  90 minutes –  Plus special post-screening conversation with the filmmakers               

 

Saturday, March 17

 

Long Shorts: Women in the World

<25 min. Shorts Exhibition –  Saturday, March 17 at 1:05pm –  57 minutes

Featuring:  Manzana, The Hire Wire, Significant One, Parachute, What If…?

 

Long Shorts: This Land is Your Land

<25 min. Shorts Exhibition –  Saturday, March 17 at 2:35pm –  68 minutes

Featuring:  Good Immigrants, The Pleasure of Being Served, Day, Night Morning, Gentrification Express: Breaking Down the BQX, Mannahatta          

 

Idol Worship

Saturday, March 17 at 4:30pm –  48 minutes – plus special post-screening conversation with the filmmakers.

 

Short Shorts

<5 min. Shorts Exhibition –  Saturday, March 17 – 40 minutes – 7:00pm

Featuring: The Race (Student Film), My Head, Horror in the Heights, Start Small Think Big, Hechas en Mexico, The 3rd Try, May 22, 2012. 

 

This American Death

Saturday, March 17 at 8:15pm –  61 minutes –  Plus special post-screening conversation with the filmmakers.

All films selected will be presented in a public film exhibition in March 15-17, 2018 at the Campbell Sports Center at Broadway and 218th Street.

OFFICIAL SELECTON INFORMATON

(In alphabetical order)

 

Brief Reunion

Director:  John Daschbach

Synopsis:  Aaron Clark’s comfortable life in the bucolic New England countryside is shattered by the unexpected arrival of former classmate Teddy who accuses him of business improprieties and cover-ups, with unforeseen consequences.

 

Day, Night, Morning

Director:  Joel Fendelman

A shy German moves to New York City to be with her fiancé, who doesn’t show up.

 

For the Birds

Director:  Miku Otagiri

James Cataldi, “The Birdman” of Inwood, NYC will take on anybody and anything to protect the birds who depend on the garbage-ridden North Cove.  He goes toe to toe with several tons of garbage, and with MTA workers, developers, City Hall, more garbage, and now, his own body.  Because he’s determined to save that one little nook of “the web of life.”

 

Gentrification Express:  Breaking Down the BQX

Director:  Samantha Farinella and Amanda Katz

In January of 2016, NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio announced his plan for the Brooklyn-Queens Connector (BQX), a streetcar that would run a 16-mile waterfront route from Astoria, Queens to Sunset Park, Brooklyn. The announcement arrived with a PR campaign that claims the BQX as a transit option hat would, among other things, serve the low-income communities along the corridor.  A closer look at who is pushing the plan and how it will be funded reveals that the BQX relies on the displacement of the communities they are currently trying to sell it to.

 

Good Immigrants

Director: Suzanne Andrews Correa

After being the victim of a robbery, an undocumented Turkish immigrant unwittingly becomes a threat to his community and his brother.

 

Harv

Director:  Stephen Tucker

An Ad Man from the Golden Age of Advertising, now in his twilight years, completes one final project for the love of art.

 

Hechas en Mexico (Made in Mexico)

Director:  Valeria Avina

Three friends decide there is no better day than today to try and change the world for the better. “Mas ágil que una torguga, más fuerte que un ratón, más noble que una lechuga, su escudo es un Corazón…¡Es el Chapulín Colorado!” (More agile than a turtle, stronger than a mouse, nobler than a lettuce, his coat of arms is a heart…It’s the Red Grasshopper!”)

 

Horror in the Heights

Director:  Carlos S. Deschamps

Taking place in Washington Heights in New York City, Timothy finds himself possessed by a demon and his only way out is through death.

 

Idol Worship

Director:  Devin Klos

Tom Klein is an archeologist who returns home after digging abroad for a few years.  He feels out of step with the current trends and isolated from the city that he has spent so little time in of late.  The dig itself has gone over very well and some major production companies are interested in turning the findings into a series.  After a night of passion, he loses his keys and must spend the day trying to recover them while still trying to make the big pitch meeting later that afternoon.  Along the way he meets new friends and discovers hard truths about himself, his findings, and the way things work that leave him with a hard choice to make.

 

Mannahatta

Director:  Albert B. Kahn

A Native American man from the seventeenth century finds himself mysteriously transported to modern-day Manhattan.  How will he get home?

 

Manzana

Director:  Michael Mullen

Manzana in a shot film that explores the dreams and possibilities of romantic what if’s and what were’s.  Woman encounters Man and is thrown into an imaginary world where her past relationships collide with present circumstances.  What will she do?

 

May 22, 2012

Director:  Samantha Farinella

A daughter reflects on the day she lost her mother.

 

My Head

Director:  Alison Loeb

While a reluctant party-goer is trapped in a one-way conversation, her head escapes to find adventure.

 

On Some Strange Mornings

Director:  Arlene Schulman

On Some Strange Mornings tells the story of Leo, a man living in Upper Manhattan who has been diagnosed with the early stages of Alzheimer’s.  He cares for his mother who lives with dementia.  Losing his words is a race against time.  We learn how Leo seeks to preserve his words and memory.

 

Pablo Caviedes – On the Map

Director:  PH Daniel Sanchez

Synopsis:  In Pablo Caviedes – On the Map short film, the film maker, PH Daniel Sanchez, follows Ecuadorian artists based in Inwood, Pablo Caviedes in his process of creating a monumental series of works inspired by the phenomenon of the American Identity and the role of immigration in development of the country.

 

Parachute

Director:  Brian Mihok

A woman, living alone, struggles with her debilitating anxiety.  She begins trying ways to improve her quality of life.  She might just have found something.

 

Significant One

Director: Melissa Czarnik

Chicago born singer Maya befriends Simon, a not so happy engaged New Yorker on the NYC subway.  What starts off as a brief interaction turns into something more intimate when the two discover they have much more in common than a t-shirt Simon is wearing.

 

Start Small Think Big

Director: Cristobal Vivar

“Recycle day” and Friends of Inwood Hill Park dedicate Earth Day to cleaning and planting new trees in Manhattan’s last remaining native forest.

 

The 3rd Try

Director:  Alfonso Rodriguez

An emotionally unstable lesbian couple tries to find solace after experiencing a traumatic loss.  Recently discharged from the hospital, a distressed Lorie is still at a loss for words.  Ryan, the pillar of their relationship, brings down her defenses in an attempt to console her.  With Lorie on the brink of a complete breakdown, Ryan finally realizes that she too feels helpless.  The two agree to embrace this hardship in hopes of moving forwards.

 

The High Wire

Director:  Joe Foley

Synopsis:  The Hire Wire catches the painfully funny misadventures of sex-crazed, love-shy Kristy as she tumbles off Tinder and onto a former Mormon named Jeff.  Part Olympic gymnast, part accident waiting to happen, the small-but-mighty Kristy takes a giant leap towards love.

 

The Pleasure of Being Served*

Director:  Michael Manese

Rosa, an undocumented immigrant from the Philippines is a single mother trying to save enough money to bring her young son. Richard, to the U.S.  She works for Hudson, a rich, young American as a domestic worker. Part of her job is to juggle logistics between his two girlfriends, Lynn, a fellow Filipina, and Jen, an American, who don’t know about each other and visit him on alternating weekends.  Having befriended the girls, Rosa becomes morally conflicted and must soon choose between enabling Hudson with his womanizing or accept the generous pay he offers – money that she badly needs. *PG-13, contains brief nudity.

 

The Race

Director:  Antonia Kogan

Synopsis:  A political satire about the 2016 Presidential Election as seen by a group of observant tweens and teens.  (Student Film.)

 

This American Death

Director:  Susan Austin

Since the death of her mom, filmmaker Susan Austin has been obsessed by what experts call the Good Death.  A gold standard in dying.  But this wasn’t Susan’s experience with her mom.  So, she sets out to interrogate this Good Death and explore the perplexing situation wherein many hope for this idealized death, but few experience it.  As Susan reflects on her own experience, she comes to appreciate all we’re up against in America:  a medical system that often keeps people fighting for their lives, doctors, ill-equipped to guide the dying, and a culture that simply doesn’t know what to do.  The film leaves views wondering what they will do in these situations and lets us off the hook where we might fall short.

 

What If…?

Director:  Lorielle Mallue

Synopsis:  Fourteen-year old Alison Pope, taking advantage of being home alone, dances around her house in anticipation of a later recital, entirely lost in her imagination.  Her fantasy is interrupted by a stranger who comes to the door and, before she knows it, is dragging her through her backyard towards her van.  Next door, fifteen-year old Kyle sees Alison being dragged through her yard. He decides against intervening but finds himself sprinting towards her.

INWOOD FILM FESTIVAL EVENTS

RED CARPET COMMUNITY ROOM

Friday, March 16 and Saturday, March 17

The Red-Carpet Community Room is a hip hub to connect filmmakers and audiences. It is for the exclusive use of all Inwood Film Festival ticketed patrons before and after each screening.  Enjoy a glass of wine from Indian Road Café or a Dyckman Beer and come to connect with neighbors before the show, stay afterward to discuss the films, meet like-minded folk, and hob-nob with local movers n’ shakers.

 

POST FEATURE CONVERSATIONS

Friday, March 16

2:05pm – Hear first-hand from local filmmakers about their process how they made their Short film following the presentation ofShort Shorts.

8:15pm – Join local cinematographer Joe Foley and special guests for a post-screening conversation about their adventurous in making Brief Reunion.  

Saturday, March 17

4:35pm – Local filmmaker, Kevin Klos, chats about the making of Idol Worship.

8:15pm – Join Inwood filmmaker Susan Austin for a post-screening conversation about her journey making This American Death.   

 

AWARD CEREMONY

Saturday, March 17 – Following the final screening at approximately 9:45pm

Join us in the Theater following the final screening of This American Death on Saturday, March 17 for the announcement of the Inwood Film Festival’s Awards for Excellence in Filmmaking.

 

AFTER PARTIES

Friday, March 17 & Saturday, March 18 – 10:00pm at Indian Road Café

Following the post-screening discussion of Brief Reunion and the Award Ceremony, join filmmakers, film aficionados, and the Inwood Art Works team at Indian Road Café (600 West 218th Street) to raise a glass to our Inwood community and its vibrant arts scene.

FUNDING

The Inwood Film Festival is a program of Inwood Art Works, a 501(c) (3) public charity.  If you would like to support the festival, contributions can be made online at www.inwoodartworks.nyc, or by check addressed to: Inwood Art Works ∙ 97 Park Terrace West ∙ New York, NY ∙ 10034.  All checks should be made out to “Inwood Art Works.”  All contributions are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.

BIOGRAPHY

AARON SIMMS (Executive Producer) is a resident of Inwood and has been creating art and entertainment for uptown audiences over 13 years.  He was recently company manager for the acclaimed Off Broadway runs of Small Mouth Sounds, and Wrestling Jerusalem.  He has worked at Maximum Entertainment Productions, Snug Harbor Productions, Richards/Climan, Inc., Manhattan Theatre Club, Playwrights Realm, DR Theatrical Management, and ICM Partners.  M.F.A. in Theater Management & Producing at Columbia University.

 

INWOOD ART WORKS creates and curates professional performing and visual arts for the Inwood community.  Through itsFilm Works, Art Works, and Stage Works programs it encouraging positive social engagement, goodwill, and unity through live theater, music, dance, film, new media, and visual arts within accessible proximity at affordable prices or free of charge.

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For more information, visit www.inwoodartworks.nyc

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