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featured films
Check out these featured films playing at the festival.
The 2008 presidential race will be the most expensive election in U.S. history. Over 2 billion dollars could be spent campaigning before the November vote. Candidates have had to dish out colossal sums just to stay in the race for the White House. And the entire country has gotten caught up in the race, from your average everyday American to the most powerful figures in the U.S. The country’s special interest groups are gearing up for battle, from Hollywood players to Wall Street financiers to Texas oil tycoons. Barack Obama says he will not accept money from Washington lobbies and accuses his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, of bowing to special interests. Clinton has riposted that lobbyists are just ordinary Americans defending the people’s interests.
Republican frontrunner John McCain has been swept up in the controversy. He has always presented himself as the party’s straight shooter when it comes to big money interests. And yet he is being supported by the same Texas oil companies that financed Bush senior’s campaign.
But there’s a new thing in this year’s election: the Internet could make it possible for candidates to finally break free of the “generosity of corporate interests.” Barack Obama is the one who has had the most success with this so far. Thanks to wide support from “small” donors and Web canvassing, the democratic frontrunner has raised more money than any of his opponents.
Our film will take a close-up look at this underground battle: a struggle between the American people, who want to chose their own president, and U.S. corporate groups, whose special interests often clash with those of ordinary citizens.
The Dallas Video Festival is a week behind us and we have all had some sleep. I really enjoyed the festival this year, I loved the venue, and I loved our Coffee and Conversation sessions, which worked on so many levels.It allowed us to have real Q&As with the makers in much more depth.Festival attendees got a chance to get in on the dinner conversation that I would have had with these filmmakers, which is when they say what’s really on their minds.It allowed us to serve the audience and the makers and keep the show moving on time.
I loved the way the projection worked.It was just amazing. Steve Alford, thank you so much.The iTunes experiment went really well, and if next year we can get all the makers to send us files instead of digital Betacam, we can keep Tim Capper from going crazy.
Everyone who came really enjoyed the videos and the experience.Even though we didn’t control the whole building like we did at the theater center, there was a great video fest vibe.It was also somewhat of a changing of the guard. This was AC's first festival running the show and she did such a wonderful job. We had a great crew working, smaller but more efficient.
Then there was Jeremy, who made it all work in every way. This year he did the job of three people, all with perfection and grace.Thanks to all of you who came.More about the festival in the weeks to come.
Right now, I’m in Boston at the Jewish Festival looking for Jewish film to program here.The Amon Carter is showing Mary Lucier's video installation, The Plains of Sweet Regret.We showed an installation from her in Year One at the Video Fest, when we were at the DMA.I’m sure it’s worth the trip.
Have a good week,
Bart
Awards at the DVF!
The Dallas Video Festival finished with a bang this year as we presented our first ever awards ceremony!Each maker received a handmade glass sculpture as our thanks for bringing such fine work to the festival.
Our jurors chose Año Uña as the Best Narrative Feature.The piece is in the tradition of still photograph montage films, but it’s especially inventive in the fact that maker Jonas Cuarón first captured photographs of his life over the period of a year before later reordering those images to discover the film’s story.We’re proud to present such daring work to Dallas.
We chose audience-favorite She Should Have Gone To The Moon as our Best Feature Documentary.It tells the story of the Mercury 13, a group of women astronauts who trained alongside John Glenn and the rest of NASA’s pioneers.These women should have gone to space, but the patriarchy cancelled the program on a whim.It took thirty years before Eileen Collins realized their dream to become a space pilot and commander.
Jurors selected My Mom Smokes Weed as Best Comedy Short, for obvious reasons.Nothing could be so uncomfortable (and thus hilarious) for the straight-laced protagonist as sitting next to his mom as she gets high at some dude’s house.Filmmaker Clay Liford thanked his mom for the inspiration.
New Business by Julia Kots won Best Dramatic Short.Dima thinks he knows everything about women - they are like the buttons he makes in a post-Soviet Russia factory. He tries his hand at being an entrepreneur by pimping two teenage girls, but business isn’t as easy as he thought.
The inspirational For Tomorrow: The First Step of the Revolution won Best Short Documentary.Blake Mycoskie’s story of charity is genuine and uplifting.In partnership with Tom’s Shoes, for each pair of shoes purchased by consumers, he manages to bring a pair of donated shoes to needy children. http://www.tomsshoes.com/
Joel Schlemowitz made Teslamania, our best Experimental Short this year.This film is really cool, combining zaps of AC in time lapse with flashing lightning in multiple exposure.Along the way, we learn about the genius and insanity that was Tesla.
For the ACE award, AC chose Chris Ohlson’s Expecting, which was featured in the Texas Show.This film is a bare bones production that abandons the luxuries other films have at their disposal, such as HD cameras, elaborate art direction, and fancy camera moves.Expecting succeeds brilliantly based only on its raw performances and talented directing.You are involved with the two characters on a real emotional level. The subject of the film is expertly crafted around the reactions of a young man and young woman as they carry on a conversation rich in subtext. It’s riveting.
Moral Kombat, Bart’s choice for the Meta-Media award, is about the effects of video games. This is not an easy “Nasty video games are bad and are the cause of the destruction of man” type of video. It is very thoughtful, very thorough, and it definitely presents both sides of the argument. The film is incredibly well produced and directed, melding the interview into hi-res images from the games. The film makes you understand what video games are really like while you’re hearing about their effects; it’s very powerful and a must-see.
THANK YOU to everyone who made the Festival possible, from the Video Association’s board, to our kind sponsors, to the artists, but most importantly, to the viewers.We are so fortunate to have this opportunity to share cutting-edge work with curious and engaged audiences here in Dallas.