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Portlander Sarah Nagy's film Eulogy screens Friday, Nov. 3.





Screen

PREVIEW

Regional Views
Northwest filmmakers ask that you eat their shorts (and documentaries) at the 27th Annual NW Film and Video Festival.

BY CHRISTOPHER MCQUAIN
243-2122


Northwest Film and Video Festival
Guild Theatre,
829 SW 9th Ave., (503) 221-1156 Thursday-Friday, Nov. 2-10
$6 per screening, $50 festival pass

The festival concludes next week with repeats of the shorts programs and a screening of the feature film Rollercoaster. Check next week's listings for more information.

Festival judge Todd Haynes, new to Portland, directed Safe and Velvet Goldmine. Previous festival judges include Gus Van Sant, Matt Groening and Boys Don't Cry producer Christine Vachon.


The Northwest Film Center's 27th Film and Video Festival is the annual fulfillment of a primary purpose: directing attention to Northwest filmmakers' work of various styles and genres.

In the case of the festival, "Northwest" means filmmakers from Alaska to Montana and anywhere in between. Festival judge Todd Haynes has selected one feature, documentaries composing two programs and short films loosely divided by theme into three programs--a total of 43 works narrowed down from 300 entries.

Encompassing narratives, animation, experimental works and documentaries of all descriptions, this year's diverse, predominantly experimental, array requires an open mind and at least a passing proclivity for underground film. But the selection is expansive enough to offer something for almost any taste or mood.

Friday, Nov. 3. 7 pm.

Shorts I: Of the Edge, DOUBLE FEATURE with 30 Frames a Second: The WTO in Seattle--The highlight of Shorts I: Of the Edge is Portlander Chel White's Soulmate, an intense, intimate and recognizable depiction of devastating loneliness and silent lives. Sarah Nagy's Eulogy, also from Portland, explores the tenuous relationship between life and art in the head of a young man who fantasizes about fame through photography. Vanessa Renwick's Satan's Holiday has as its subject a Portland Satanist named "Diabolos Rex." Also screening is Sarah Marcus and Kate Hardy's enigmatic, feminist Knuckle Down (Portland), Todd Korgan's The Man with the Empty Room (Portland), James Yu's Poppa (Portland), and James Diamond's The Man from Venus (Vancouver, B.C.).

Seattle filmmaker/journalist Rustin Thompson's documentary, 30 Frames a Second: The WTO in Seattle, deals with 1999's notorious demonstrations against the World Trade Organization. The film takes its title from Jean-Luc Godard's famous assertion that "cinema is truth at 24 frames per second." The more literal "documentary" bits are engaging and disturbing, but it's Thompson's reflective queries into the nature of "truth" in filmmaking that are truly fascinating. Portlander Zak Margolis' Googlie Eye Movie, a short documentary about a peculiar series of photographs, also screens as the double feature.

Saturday, Nov. 4. 2 pm. Youthspeak--A selection of films by younger filmmakers, grades K-12, who have chosen to tackle complex issues through the use of video. Some of the films that will be screened were selections in this year's Young People's Film and Video Festival. This program is free.

Saturday, Nov. 4. 7 pm.

Shorts II: Of the Heart, DOUBLE FEATURE with Shorts III: Of the Spleen--Shorts II: Of the Heart includes the gorgeously filmed, resonant Christmas, a Nabokov adaptation you won't be able to take your eyes off of, directed by Seattle's Serge Gregory. Another Seattle entry, Lynn Shelton's sobering The Clouds That Touch Us Out of Clear Skies is an experimental documentary in which women relate the physical and emotional grief of miscarriage. Other shorts in the evening's program include Vision Point, an instamatic Canadian travelogue from British Columbia by Stephen Arthur; The Day Stashi Ran Out of Honey, a finely animated memoir of rural Japan during WWII by Victoria, B.C.'s Sonia Bridge; the Warhol-esque Eating My Words by Seattle's Rachel Lord; Israel Katz's One Story (Seattle); and Portlanders Billy Caliente's Yellow 40, Red 06 and David Massachi's Slingshot.

Shorts III: Of the Spleen features British Columbia filmmaker Josh Byer's Bob Appleby Is a Loser, a 10-minute comedy about a go-nowhere welfare recipient, his crack-dealing best friend and the little things that can make or break a life. Thief of Souls, by Byer's fellow British Columbian Clancy Dennehy, is an extremely unsettling tale of random murder told entirely with hand puppets. Yet another British Columbia selection, Steve Rosenberg's Watching Mrs. Pommeranz, is a beautiful and colorfully shot story, one of the festival's few dramatic pieces, chronicling the everyday life and loves of a little boy who develops an innocuous but overwhelming crush on the sexy mother next door. Surely the best animated offering out of any of the short programs, Fansom the Lizard, by Seattle's Evan Mathers, is the story of a young boy who, to escape his domesticated suburban milieu, dreams a tender, exciting and sleazy life for his pet lizard.

Other films on the program include Portlander Joanna Priestley's sculpture-morphing Surface Dive; Pendemonium, a silent short by Martin Friedman of Seattle that's something of a live-action Looney Toons episode; Bear Necessities, the animated tale of a bear's jailbreak; and Destiny, an anti-infomercial by Matt McCormick.

Sunday, Nov. 5.

Northwest Documents--Echo of Water Against Rocks, a documentary by Ian McCluskey and Steve Mital of Eugene, tells the story of geographical change wrought by the closing of The Dalles Dam floodgates in 1957, a change that still affects the region's native people two generations later. Islas Hermanas, by Seattle's Mark Dworkin and Melissa Young, details the intricacies of friendly bridge-building between cultures, while still another Seattle entry, Frank Abe's Conscience and the Constitution, dissects the prosecution of Japanese-American pacifists during WWII.

Monday, Nov. 6.

Northwest Documents--The Last Angry Man: Oregon's Senator Wayne Morse, by Christopher Houser and Robert Millis of Portland, is a look back on the popular senator from Oregon (1944-1968). Roll on Columbia: Woody Guthrie and the Bonneville Power Administration by Michael Majdic and Denise Matthews of Eugene will also screen.

 

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