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cinequest's blogEmpowering the Maverick, Cinequest Institute produces: Cinequest Film Festival, Cinequest Distribution, and Cinequest Mentoring & Education. Cinequest discovers Maverick artists and showcases the latest cutting-edge technology. Official Cinequest Blog. Susan Tavernetti contributing (and more) The Best of the Fest part 1 - Student Shorts, Monster Camp and Blood Car.It is Monday, March 12th, and Cinequest has come to an end. This is a bitter-sweet moment; on the one hand I am already missing the frenetic buzz of running from film to forum and back to film, stopping to chat with filmmakers and attendees along the way and getting another caffeine dose in order to do it all over again. On the other hand, this now frees me up to actually get to the blog entries I have been meaning to assail you with, covering everything from my favorite festival films, to my final thoughts. Sunday, March 4th turned out to be an exemplary day. I started the day with the Student Shorts program, a section very dear to me as I had two films on show at this very festival last year. As usual, the program was laced with extraordinary examples of filmmaking, as black and white no budget shorts rubbed shoulders with glossy, well funded efforts. Of particular interest to me were the following:
I chose these films as my favorites due to their original content and flair for camera-work, and it will be interesting to see if any of these end up on the Academy shortlist next year! My day just got better and better from that point on. Next up was Monster Camp, the second Cinequest entry from Cullen Hoback (Freedom State). I was extremely excited to see this documentary, as I had a personal interest in the subject of 'real life' role-playing. Back in the mid-80's I would regularly spend my weekends in the dank depths of Chislehurst Caves in Kent, playing Dungeons and With this in mind, I settled in and watched Cullen's documentary follow the lives of select players in Seattle as they battled for 48 straight hours in a live action RPG called NERO. We followed the trials and tribulations of Shane, the organizer who tried to hold everything together, Dave, the World of Warcraft addict who was to become Shane's arch nemesis and the various heroes and monsters of the games. Not only was Monster Camp hugely entertaining, but Cullen did not exploit his subjects by choosing an easy ridiculing of the activity. Instead he employed a sympathetic lens, and allowed the humor to develop from the players themselves, whose natural characters turned out to be far more interesting than their NERO alter-egos! This documentary is a stunning achievement, and I was delighted to see Cullen win the Maverick Spirit Award for his film. Go to www.monstercampmovie.com for more information and future screenings. How could I top seeing a fantastic film? Go see another one - and I did! I had been longing to see Blood Car since it saw its description in the program, and I thought it might be an amusingly twisted jaunt. How wrong I was. Blood Car is a hilarious, frenzied, gore drenched, head spinning jaunt and I loved every second of it. Gloriously photographed on the Sony F900, Blood Car took us on a joy ride down the freeway of bad taste, stopping only to pick up the sexiest or strangest of hikers to fuel its insatiable fuel lust. The leads, Mike Brune, Katie Rawlett and Anna Chlumsky were pitch perfect, and Alex Orr who directed, produced Go to www.bloodcar.com to check out the madness from Fake Wood Wallpaper productions. It's days like this that make Cinequest great. By God, I miss it. by Neil Baker 13.03.2007 | cinequest's blog Cat. : Independent FILM FESTIVALS |
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