FILM INDEPENDENT & LACMA Join Forces for New Film Series

Jeff Koons’ Balloon Dog (Blue)

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) announced today that it has entered into a partnership with Film Independent, the non-profit arts organization that produces the Spirit Awards and the Los Angeles Film Festival.  As a result of the museum’s analysis and strategic planning process (funded by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association) over the past year around its current film program, Film Independent was identified as an ideal partner for its film series.  The collaboration combines LACMA’s efforts in presenting film within an encyclopedic art historical context with Film Independent’s strong relationships with filmmakers and expertise in building audiences and developing programs for a wide spectrum of films.  The partnership is effective immediately, with new programming to begin in September 2011.

LACMA and Film Independent are also thrilled to have The New York Times as the sole Presenting Sponsor of the new Film Series.  As a national newspaper that has long offered extensive coverage of films and filmmakers, this collaboration will serve to establish a larger cultural presence in Los Angeles for The New York Times.

LACMA and Film Independent will inaugurate the new weekly Film Series in September 2011 with previews of feature-length narrative and documentary films; archival films and repertory series; conversations with emerging and established filmmakers and artists; international showcases; family films; and special guest-curated programs. In addition, monthly post-screening receptions will bring together the Los Angeles creative community by offering a gathering place for film lovers, artists and the general public. The current LACMA film program, as well as Film Independent’s year-round Film Series will continue through mid-September.  Additionally, LACMA will continue its Tuesday matinee series and film programs presented in conjunction with special exhibitions.

LACMA CEO and Wallis Annenberg Director Michael Govan notes, “As the only encyclopedic art museum in Los Angeles, the film capital of the world, LACMA should, and will be, at the forefront of the consideration and presentation of how film has played an ever-increasing role in contemporary art and life.  In conversations with the film community over the past year, we have decided that collaboration and partnership is the most effective way to advance the shared mission of our organizations.”  Govan continues, “Our goal is to create a field-leading film department that captures the importance of film and moving images in the history of art, in keeping with LACMA’s curatorial mission.”

Ian Birnie, LACMA’s Consulting Curator in the Film Department, will be leaving this fall. His final film series to be programmed for the museum will be a Tim Burton retrospective this summer, complementing the Tim Burton exhibition opening May 29. “We are enormously grateful to Ian for his substantial contribution to LACMA’s film program over the last fifteen years,” says Govan.  “His commitment, discerning vision, and hard work have been invaluable.”

Film Independent’s Programming department (which programs year-round Film Series and the Los Angeles Film Festival), in conjunction with a new lead programmer starting in the summer, will serve as curators for the new Film Series.  They’ll be working closely with LACMA’s director and curatorial staff to cover a breadth of film that promotes a cinematic dialogue and showcases artistic achievement.

“Our partnership with LACMA is a wonderful way for Film Independent to further strengthen our commitment to championing film artists and bringing their work to a larger audience. The new series will provide our membership with a richer film-going experience, and it’s a beautiful pairing of the film world and the art world that makes perfect sense in Los Angeles,” said Dawn Hudson, Executive Director of Film Independent.  “We’re also so excited to be working with The New York Times on this series, as they share our passion for supporting original and compelling filmmaking.”

“Times readers are enthusiastic fans of film.  They look to us for critical insight on individual films and for overall coverage of the industry.  This collaboration with LACMA and Film Independent makes tremendous sense for The Times as it allows us to continue our commitment to the discovery and showcasing of great films while deepening our role in Los Angeles,” said Lou Fabrizio, Vice President of Entertainment Advertising at The New York Times.

“LACMA’s assessment of its film program has resulted in a deeper commitment.  The museum will present major exhibitions focused on the art of film, including the upcoming MOMA-organized Tim Burton, Gabriel Figueroa in 2013, and Stanley Kubrick next year.  We wanted to strengthen the series, not compete with what other presenters are doing, which is why Film Independent is a natural choice,” said Terry Semel, LACMA Board of Trustees Co-Chair.

LACMA will continue its Tuesday matinee series as well as film programs presented in conjunction with special exhibitions. It will also plan annual film-related exhibitions, as it has previously with Dali: Painting & Film (2007) and the upcoming Tim Burton (May 29-October 31, 2011), and planned offerings from international filmmakers Stanley Kubrick (2012) and Gabriel Figueroa (2013) are in the works.

About LACMA

Since its inception in 1965, LACMA has been devoted to collecting works of art that span both history and geography-and represent Los Angeles’s uniquely diverse population. Today, the museum features particularly strong collections of Asian, Latin American, European, and American art, as well as a contemporary museum on its campus. With this expanded space for contemporary art, innovative collaborations with artists, and an ongoing Transformation project, LACMA is creating a truly modern lens through which to view its rich encyclopedic collection.

Location and Contact: 5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA, 90036 | 323 857-6000 | lacma.org

Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday: noon-8 pm; Friday: noon-9 pm; Saturday, Sunday: 11 am-8 pm; closed Wednesday

General Admission: Adults: $15; students 18+ with ID and senior citizens 62+: $10

Free General Admission: Members; children 17 and under; after 5 pm weekdays for L.A. County residents; second Tuesday of every month; Target Free Holiday Mondays


About Film Independent

Film Independent is a non-profit arts organization that champions independent film and supports a community of artists who embody diversity, innovation, and uniqueness of vision. Film Independent helps filmmakers make their movies, builds an audience for their projects, and works to diversify the film industry. Film Independent’s Board of Directors, filmmakers, staff, and constituents, are comprised of an inclusive community of individuals across ability, age, ethnicity, gender, race, and sexual orientation. Anyone passionate about film can become a member, whether you are a filmmaker, industry leader, or a film lover.

With over 250 annual screenings and events, Film Independent provides access to a network of like-minded artists who are driving creativity in the film industry. Film Independent offers free Filmmaker Labs for selected writers, directors, and producers; provides cut-rate services for filmmakers; and presents year-round networking opportunities. Film Independent’s mentorship and job placement program, Project:Involve, pairs emerging culturally diverse filmmakers with film industry professionals.

Film Independent produces the Los Angeles Film Festival, celebrating the best of American and international cinema and the Spirit Awards, a celebration honoring films and filmmakers that embody independence and dare to challenge the status quo.

FILM INDEPENDENT SELECTS 14 FILMMAKERS FOR INAUGURAL DOCUMENTARY LAB

Laura Gabbert, Scott Hamilton Kennedy, Caroline Libresco, Doug Pray, Heather Rae, Eddie Schmidt, AJ Schnack to Serve as Lab Mentors –

Film Independent, the non-profit arts organization that produces the Spirit Awards and the Los Angeles Film Festival, has launched a new Documentary Lab, sponsored by Latino Public Broadcasting, with 14 filmmakers and 9 projects participating. Documentary Lab is an intensive seven-week program, with a main focus of assisting documentary filmmakers on their works-in-progress and providing creative feedback. All of the Film Independent Labs are designed to support strong, original voices develop their filmmaking careers in a nurturing, yet challenging creative environment. Documentary Lab Mentors include filmmakers Laura Gabbert (No Impact Man), Scott Hamilton Kennedy (The Garden), Doug Pray (Art & Copy), AJ Schnack (Convention),Sundance Film Festival Senior Programmer Caroline Libresco, and producers Heather Rae (Frozen River) and Eddie Schmidt (Troubadours). filmmakers Jen Arnold (A Small Act), Jeff Malmberg (Marwencol), Chicken & Egg’s Julie Benello, Paradigm Consulting’s Peter Broderick, Donaldson & Callif LLP’s Michael Donaldson, Latino Public Broadcasting’s Luis Ortiz, and ITVS’ Richard Saiz.

“We could not be more excited by the projects in our first Documentary Lab,” said Josh Welsh, Film Independent’s Director of Talent Development. “It’s an astonishing group of films and filmmakers, and we’re honored to be working with them. We are also deeply grateful to the filmmakers who are serving as mentors and guest speakers to the Lab.”

Deadlines coming up for some of Film Independent’s other Talent Development programs are: an extension for Fast Track, which includes a $15,000 Alfred P. Sloan Grant (April 4), Screenwriter’s Lab (March 28), Project:Involve (April 25), and Producers Lab (July 11). To apply for these programs, please visit FilmIndependent.org The 2011 Documentary Lab filmmakers and their projects are:

1.Above the Fold – A one-hour documentary about a group of young Latino journalists who responded to negative portrayals of Latinos in the Los Angeles Times by writing their own stories. Working against the resistance of their editors, they were vindicated in 1984 when they became the first Latino group to win the Pulitzer Prize.

Roberto Gudiño is a Los Angeles based documentarian and has won numerous awards. His documentary about a coffee cooperative that helps alleviate illegal immigration, Just Coffee, was awarded the UA Centennial Achievement Award and has gone onto to screen in numerous national and international festivals. Below the Fold garnered him an Imagen Award nomination and the prestigious Directors Guild of America Jury Prize. Roberto was selected by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to shoot Burning the Midnight Oil, a documentary commissioned as part of their ongoing “Storyteller Initiative.” He is currently developing, directing and co-producing Above the Fold for television, and is also in Film Independent’s Project:Involve.

2.Call Me KuchuFour LGBT Ugandans fight for justice and freedom on the frontlines of Africa’s gay rights movement. At once tragic and hopeful, this is their story.

Katherine Fairfax Wright graduated from Columbia University with a double major in Anthropology and Film. She is the producer of Gabi On the Roof In July, which premiered at Cinequest 2010, and won Best Narrative Feature and Best Actress at the Brooklyn Film Festival. Weaned on a school of vérité filmmakers, she has worked closely with Nelson Walker, Fellipe Barbosa, and Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt. She associate-produced Perlmutt and Walker’s award-winning Lumo, which aired on P.O.V. Wright also associate-produced Perlmutt’s Les Vulnerables, the closing short at New York Film Festival 2007. Wright has worked in a producing role on five other films and she is an award-winning photographer.

Malika Zouhail-Worrall is a print and video journalist whose work has been published in The Financial Times and at CNN.com. She has reported for CNN.com from India, Uganda, China and the U.S., including a feature article on the lack of workplace rights for transgender employees in the U.S. That story was told through the painful experiences of a transman who transitioned from female to male while working at a Connecticut factory. Zouhali-Worrall graduated with a BA from Cambridge University and an MA in International Affairs from the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences Po).

3.GravityThis is the awe-inspiring and touching love story of Carl and Jean Boenish, a young couple who invented the sport of B.A.S.E. jumping.

Marah Strauch graduated from Rhode Island School of Design with a dual degree in film and glass art, studied filmmaking and screenwriting at NYU and The New School, and recently attended Werner Herzog’s Rogue Film School. She has directed over a dozen short films (NU, Ghoul of My Dreams, Avenue C, Free Form), many of which toured the festival circuit and were shown in galleries nationwide. Marah has been writing, researching, developing and shooting Gravity for over four years, and recently completed restoration of the entire catalogue of Carl Boenish’s pre-B.A.S.E. jumping skydive films. Gravity was recently selected for Film Independent’s Fast Track program at the Los Angeles Film Festival. Marah is also a well-respected commercial and documentary editor/producer, and recently edited a national campaign for American Express, which featured documentary-style portraits of well-known tennis players Billie Jean King, Venus Williams and John McEnroe.

4.The Light in Her EyesIn a world rarely seen by outsiders, Houda al-Habash empowers women by teaching Qur’an at her mosque in Damascus, Syria. The story of one summer at Houda’s school reveals why women are choosing Islam in a rapidly changing world.

Julia Meltzer has directed and produced 5 award-winning documentary projects. Her video work with David Thorne, including It’s Not My Memory of It, We Will Live to See These Things and Not a Matter of If But When has been awarded prizes at the European Media Arts Festival, Transmediale, and the Rio de Janeiro Short Film Festival. Recent art work has been exhibited at Modern Art Oxford, Steve Turner Gallery, HomeWorks IV in Beirut, and the 2008 Whitney Biennial. She is a recipient of grants from Art Matters, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, the Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship Fund, the Guggenheim Foundation, and was a Fulbright Fellow in Damascus, Syria in 2005-06. She is a fluent Spanish speaker and proficient in Arabic (Levantine spoken dialect).

Laura Nix recently produced the documentary festival hit The Yes Men Fix the World and is currently a writer on the documentary California State of Mind: The Legacy of Pat Brown, about the former governor. Her non-fiction work has been shown on HBO, IFC, Planet Green and the History Channel, in addition to international DVD distribution. She is the writer and director of the narrative feature The Politics of Fur, which played in over 70 film festivals internationally, and won numerous awards including the Grand Jury Prize at Outfest. In 2001, Laura co-founded the production company Automat Pictures, where she produced and/or directed over 100 presentations, including the feature documentary Whether You Like It Or Not: The Story of Hedwig. Previously, she was a member of Oscar-winning filmmakers Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman’s production team as Associate Producer of The Celluloid Closet.

5.The Road to NasiriyahThis film is the extraordinary journey of two American filmmakers documenting the unprecedented looting of archeological sites following the 2003 Iraq war. This documentary is a story of passion; it is a poetic meditation on post-war Iraq and an intellectual thriller that ends in a dramatic kidnapping.

Marie-Hélène Carleton is a graduate of Johns Hopkins and has been awarded fellowships at the MacDowell Colony and the Ucross Foundation. She is an award-winning filmmaker, photographer and writer, and is currently completing her first feature-length documentary, The Road to Nasiriyah. Her film work, writing and photography has appeared in the New York Times, Newsweek and the Financial Times, and her 3-part online documentary for the Financial Times was a 2009 Webby Honoree. Marie- Hélène is co-author, with Micah Garen, of the memoir American Hostage, which received starred reviews in Kirkus and Publisher’s Weekly. A CBS Sunday Morning segment and her and Micah’s film work in Iraq was an Emmy nominee, and she has been interviewed on ABC, NPR, MSNBC and others about her work as a journalist and filmmaker. Marie- Hélène is a co-founder of the media production company Four Corners Media and has participated in the 2009 IFP Documentary Film Lab.

Micah Garen is an award-winning photographer, author and documentary filmmaker, who has worked in conflict zones around the world, including Iraq, Afghanistan and southern Lebanon. His writing and photographer have been published in Vanity Fair, New York Times, New York Times Magazine, U.S. News & World Report, Newsweek, Financial Times Magazine, and the Associated Press. His documentary film work has appeared online for New York Times, Financial Times, Associated Press and PBS, and in Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 911. His critically acclaimed first book, American Hostage, a memoir about his time as a hostage in Iraq, was published by Simon & Schuster in 2005. Micah has spoken extensively in the media about his experiences in Iraq, and was profiled in a CBS Sunday Morning piece that was nominated for an Emmy. He has received fellowships from the MacDowell Colony and the Ucross Foundation, and was selected to participate in the 2009 IFP Documentary Film Lab. He is currently in post-production on The Road to Nasiriyah, and founded Four Corners Media in 2000 with his partner Marie-Hélène Carleton.

6. Sick Mick and the Boys – This film tells the story of the Charlton brothers in their pursuit to break the motorcycle land speed record. Once estranged by prison, drugs and unemployment, the four brothers band together to build a jet-powered motorcycle in their Cleveland garage.

José Asunción is an award-winning filmmaker from Chicago with an MFA from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts, and is a two-time recipient of the prestigious graduate filmmaker scholarship from the National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts. His works have aired on HBO, MTV3, the Documentary Channel, PBS and has garnered honors from both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. When he is not working on post-production for Sick Mick and the Boys, José enjoys creating animated gifts of documentaries and committing Richard Pryor albums to memory.

Brian Davis is an award-winning director and editor from Central Virginia who received an MFA from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. He has produced works that have aired on MTV, the Documentary Channel and PBS, as well as screened at Slamdance, Seattle and Gen Art film festivals. In 2008, he was awarded the Student Academy Award in the Documentary Category for his film, If a Body Meet a Body, and was named one of Coca-Cola’s Refreshing Filmmakers Finalists. In addition to following people around with a camera and documenting their every move, Brian has filmed professional skateboarding, and is a contributing writer to several skateboard publications.

7. STRAND: A Natural History of Cinema – What does it mean to go to the movies? Through an examination of the repertory and revival era in San Francisco, this documentary explores this question while uncovering the hidden history of one of the richest moments in film going.

Christian Bruno is a writer and director whose films have played around the world, from Needles, CA to Tehran, Iran. The short documentary Pie Fight ’69 (made with Sam Green) received numerous awards from the Sundance, Black Maria and Chicago Underground film festivals, and continues to play worldwide. He has received commissions from the SF Arts Commission for film and film-based installations, and is a recent fellow of the MacDowell Colony. As a cinematographer, Christian’s work appears in Natalija Vekic’s award-winning short Lost & Found, and in the 2007 feature films Revolution Summer and Rock Haven.

Natalija Vekic is a filmmaker and producer, who was the recipient of the prestigious Princess Grace Award in film, and was invited to participate in the 2003 Bay Area Now III show at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Her initial work as a filmmaker centered on a trilogy of fairy tales, and her films have screened at the New York Underground, Ann Arbor, and Mill Valley film festivals. Her latest short film, Lost & Found, garnered a Golden State Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival, and she was a recipient of a San Francisco Individual Arts Commission Grant. In addition to producing STRAND: A Natural History of Cinema, Natalija is currently writing two feature film scripts, Sarajevo Blues and Paper Airplanes.

8. Untitled Gay Retiree Documentary – This film captures the experiences of several LGBTQ seniors as they navigate the adventures, challenges and surprises of their “golden years.”

PJ Raval is an award-winning filmmaker/cinematographer (ASC Charles B. Lang Jr. Heritage Award, Haskell Wexler Award for Best Cinematography), and was named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s “25 New Faces of Independent Film” in 2006, Out Magazine’s “100 Out” in 2010, and has been featured in American Cinematographer. PJ’s latest film Trinidad (co-directed by Jay Hodges) won the Cleveland International Film Festival Documentary Jury Award and can currently be seen on Showtime and MTV’s Logo network. His cinematography credits include the 2009 Academy Award nominated and 2008 Sundance Film Festival Documentary Grand Jury Award Winner Trouble the Water, the 2006 Film Independent Spirit Award nominated Room, the Los Angeles Film Festival Narrative Feature Award winner Gretchen, The Two Bobs, and the recently wrapped Cooler. PJ is currently shooting Fourplay, his second feature with acclaimed director Kyle Henry.

9. We Women WarriorsThis film follows three brave and remarkable native women in Colombia as they nonviolently defend their autonomy amid ongoing warfare.

Nicole Karsin has a BA from Sarah Lawrence College and a Masters of Science from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She moved to Bogotá to cover Colombia’s armed conflict and humanitarian crisis as a correspondent for a U.S. audience in 2002 and recently moved back to LA to complete We Women Warriors. She has reported for the New York Times, Village Voice, San Francisco Chronicle, NPR and Pacifica Radio among others. White working as an independent journalist in radio, print and photography, Nicole began producing and directing digital films. She formed Todos Los Pueblos Productions LLC (All the Peoples’ Productions) in 2007 to move audiences to action through artful, character-driven films about global struggles for human rights and dignity. In 2008, NextPix selected We Women Warriors for the “firstPix” grant for an opera primi representing humanistic media.

ABOUT FILM INDEPENDENT

Film Independent is a non-profit arts organization that champions independent film and supports a community of artists who embody diversity, innovation, and uniqueness of vision. Film Independent helps filmmakers make their movies, builds an audience for their projects, and works to diversify the film industry. Film Independent’s Board of Directors, filmmakers, staff, and constituents, are comprised of an inclusive community of individuals across ability, age, ethnicity, gender, race, and sexual orientation. Anyone passionate about film can become a member, whether you are a filmmaker, industry leader, or a film lover.

With over 250 annual screenings and events, Film Independent provides access to a network of like-minded artists who are driving creativity in the film industry. Film Independent offers free Filmmaker Labs for selected writers, directors, and producers; provides cut-rate services for filmmakers; and presents year-round networking opportunities. Film Independent’s mentorship and job placement program, Project:Involve, pairs emerging culturally diverse filmmakers with film industry professionals.

Film Independent produces the Los Angeles Film Festival, celebrating the best of American and international cinema and the Spirit Awards, a celebration honoring films and filmmakers that embody independence and dare to challenge the status quo.

For more information or to become a member, visit FilmIndependent.org.

Film Independent Selects 12 Fellows For 2010 Screenwriters Lab

LOS ANGELES (August 18, 2010) — Film Independent, the non-profit arts organization that produces the Spirit Awards and Los Angeles Film Festival, has announced the 12 screenwriters and film projects selected for its 11th annual Screenwriters Lab, sponsored by the Writers Guild of America, West. Taking place in Los Angeles from August 12 until September 16, the Screenwriters Lab is an intensive six-week program designed to help writers improve their craft, and take their current scripts to the next level in a nurturing, yet challenging creative environment. Screenwriter and producer Meg LeFauve resumes duties as this year’s Lab Instructor, and Lab Mentors and Guest Speakers include Nicole Holofcener (Please Give), Erin Cressida Wilson (Chloe), José Rivera (The Motorcycle Diaries), Josh Olson (A History of Violence), and Kay Schaber-Wolf (WGAw).

“Our Labs have always attracted a high level of talent from different backgrounds and disciplines, and this year is no exception,” said Director of Talent Development Josh Welsh. “With expert guidance from Meg, Nicole, Erin, José, and Josh, our Lab Fellows will not only hone their screenwriting skills, but also move their current projects closer to production.”

In the Screenwriters Lab, Fellows are advised on the craft and business of screenwriting under the tutelage of the Lab Mentors, and are also introduced to established screenwriters, producers and film professionals who serve as one-on-one advisors. The Screenwriters Lab is provided free to accepted screenwriters, and upon completion, they become Film Independent Fellows, receiving year-round support including access to Film Independent’s annual film educational offerings, on-staff Filmmaker Advisor, and the Los Angeles Film Festival. In addition, Lab Fellows are eligible to join the Indie Writers Caucus of the Writers Guild of America, West. Recent projects developed through the Lab include Philip Flores’ The Wheeler Boys, which premiered at the 2010 Los Angeles Film Festival; Suzi Yoonessi’s Dear Lemon Lima, which premiered at the 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival; Erin Cassidy and Bruce Pavalon’s We Are the Mods, which won the Best Screenplay award at the 2009 Outfest Film Festival; Beth Schacter’s Normal Adolescent Behavior, which premiered at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival; Scott Prendergast’s Kabluey, which premiered at the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival; and Minh Nguyen-Vo’s Buffalo Boy, which was Vietnam’s entry to the 2006 Academy Awards.

The 2010 Screenwriters Lab participants and their projects are:

1. County Line – A rural North Carolina sheriff attempts to dissolve his corrupt alliance with the top local drug dealer; however, when he suspects that his counterpart is the serial rapist and killer who has recently been terrorizing an entire county, the Sheriff has to figure out how to catch him without causing his own downfall.

Tina Mabry is a writer/director with a MFA in Film Production from USC’s School of Cinema-Television. While participating in Film Independent’s Project: Involve, Mabry finished developing and writing her short film, Brooklyn’s Bridge to Jordan, which she went on to direct. The film has been screened in more than 50 film festivals worldwide and has won multiple Jury and Audience Awards as well as a Best Director award. Brooklyn’s Bridge to Jordan aired on Showtime, BET J, and was voted the #1 film on the season finale of LOGO’s The Click List 2: Best in Short Film. Shortly after graduating from USC, Mabry co-wrote a feature screenplay entitled Itty Bitty Titty Committee, directed by Jamie Babbit. The film premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival (2007) and won Best Feature Narrative at SXSW (2007). In 2008, Mabry participated in the FIND Directors Lab with her feature film, Mississippi Damned. While playing on the festival circuit, Mississippi Damned has garnered an impressive 11 awards from participation in 13 film festivals, including awards for Best Feature Film and Best Screenplay at the Chicago International Film Festival (2009). Mabry was named among the 25 New Faces of Independent Film in Filmmaker Magazine in July 2009 and was recognized by Out Magazine as one of the most inspirational and outstanding people of 2009. Mabry was recently featured in Advocate as part of their Top Forty Under 40 issue, which features the top 40 individuals who are raising the bar in their respective fields.

Morgan R. Stiff is a writer/director with a MFA in Film Production from USC’s School of Cinema-Television, and received her BFA from NYU in Dramatic Writing in 2002. While attending USC, she was chosen as a participant of Film Independent’s Project: Involve. As a producer, Stiff has produced fiction and documentary films, as well as promotional videos. Projects include Porcelain (2004), which is currently being distributed by Iron Rod Motion Pictures, Inc.; Hip Hop Homos (LOGO Networks, 2004); and the award-winning Brooklyn’s Bridge to Jordan (Showtime, LOGO, BET J, 2005). As an editor, Stiff has worked on tributes, music videos, fiction films, and documentaries, with those projects including Hope’s Choice (Showtime, 2004) and the award-winning documentary, One Bad Cat: The Reverend Albert Wagner Story (Ovation TV, 2009), which she also produced. In 2007, Stiff participated in the FIND Producer’s Lab with Mississippi Damned and went on to produce and edit the award-winning and critically acclaimed film. She is also the Chief Production Officer of Morgan’s Mark, a production company dedicated to bringing marginalized stories to the mainstream.

2. Dandekar Finds Home – After being forced into retirement, a kindly Indian man goes on a search to find the beloved car his well-meaning daughters have traded away.

Leena Pendharkar is an award-winning writer and director whose feature film debut, Raspberry Magic, is currently making its way around the festival circuit, and will be released in theaters and VOD (Amazon, Netflix) later this year. Her short films, both docs and narrative fiction, have won numerous awards including 1st Prize at EarthVision Film Festival, a Bronze award at WorldFest Houston and 1st Prize at the Kansas City Filmmakers’ Jubilee. Her short film, My Narmada Travels, was picked up for broadcast on Al Gore’s network, Current TV. She has also worked extensively in interactive media, and was recognized for her work with the Wired Magazine Excellence in New Media award. She teaches filmmaking at Loyola Marymount University and Otis College of Art and Design and holds a Masters in Documentary Film Production from UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.

3. Hey, Hey Johnny – When Will Kennedy finds a dead body outside his bedroom window, the search for the anonymous boy’s identity forces him to discover what it means to be alive, what it means to be in love, and what it means to lose both.

Nicolas Citton is a writer/director who recently completed his studies at Columbia University’s Graduate Film Program. While in school, he co-created the comedy series, This Space for Rent, which was developed with the National Screen Institute of Canada and the Canadian Broadcasting Company. The show aired on CBC Television, and was nominated for numerous awards. This past year, Citton’s feature, That Burning Feeling, was selected for The Canadian Film Centre’s Comedy Lab and developed alongside Just for Laughs Canada. The project is currently in pre-production with Resonance Films. Nicolas has several television and film projects presently in development, including Lust for Life, another comedy series with CBC Television.

4. In From the Cold – A family races for the edge of communist Poland while being pursued by a Russian agent, 48 hours before martial law is announced and the borders close.

Dominika Waclawiak is a political refugee who escaped with her parents from Communist Poland in the early 1980’s. Since then, she has become a director, writer and visual effects artist, graduating from Cornell University with a Bachelor’s in Architecture and is a former National Science Foundation Young Scholar. Her Visual Effects credits include: the upcoming true stereoscopic feature, Yogi Bear, Night at the Museum: The Battle for the Smithsonian, Land of the Lost, The Incredible Hulk, Evan Almighty, Superman Returns, The Chronicles of Narnia: the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and the Oscar-winning films, Happy Feet and The Golden Compass. She has production designed and art directed various independent shorts, music videos and spots for Nickelodeon, MTV and Good Machine. Waclawiak’s directorial debut, a 35mm stop-motion animated short Piekni was completed in 2007 and went on to play at the Slamdance Film Festival, Anarchy Division, Beverly Hills Film Festival and dozens of other national and international film festivals. The film is currently distributed by Ouat Media in Toronto, Canada. In 2008, she was one of 8 women selected for AFI’s Directing Workshop for Women, where she wrote and directed her third narrative short, the VFX fantasy, Gosia’s Witch. Her first feature script, In From the Cold, was a finalist in the 2010 Sundance Screenwriting Lab and is a current quarterfinalist for the Nicholl Fellowship. She is currently writing a feature screenplay, which she is also set to direct, tentatively titled The Sixth Victim, for producer Tracy Mercer (Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman). Waclawiak has studied art, photography and architectural design in Iceland; Norway, in conjunction with the University of Oslo; Sweden, Denmark, Poland and throughout Italy. Her paintings and photography have been exhibited in various galleries in Los Angeles, Rome and New York City.

5. Look for the Light – A modern day Faustian legend, Look For The Light is a psychological thriller about a war photographer, his spiritual degradation and his search for redemption.

Topaz Adizes is a writer/director and studied philosophy at UC Berkeley and Oxford before turning to film. He has directed a number of award-winning short films including Laredo, Texas (Sundance 2010), Trece Años (Sundance 2009) and City (Winner of Aspen Shorts Film Festival 2007). Americana, his first feature documentary, shot around the world from Hiroshima, Tirana, Belgrade, Ho Chi Minh City, Istanbul and Havana, explores American identity in a global context. Adizes has also had valuable experience learning from Steven Spielberg on Munich, Ridley Scott on Kingdom of Heaven, and P.T. Anderson on There Will Be Blood.

6. Skirt – When beautiful, brilliant, ambitious Allie goes to work for a fast-paced political campaign, she finds herself caught romantically between her older female boss and a rakish male colleague.

Chris Mason Johnson is a writer/director and studied filmmaking at Amherst College. Beforehand, Johnson had a successful career as a dancer in major ballet and modern companies, including William Forsythe’s Frankfurt Ballet and White Oak Dance Project with Mikhail Baryshnikov. After college, Johnson worked as a Script Analyst and Editor for Miramax, Dimension, Fine Line, ABC Family and Disney, and rose to the position of Head of Development at Open City Films in New York (Three Seasons, Chuck and Buck). Johnson made several short films before he co-wrote, directed and produced his first feature film, The New Twenty (2009), which won Best Director/First Feature at Ft. Lauderdale International Film Festival, Best Screenwriting at FilmOut San Diego, Best Lead Actress at Outfest, and was the Closing Night Presentation at Montreal’s prestigious image+nation Gay & Lesbian Film Festival. The New Twenty had a limited theatrical release in the U.S., was broadcast on MTV Logo, released on DVD by Wolfe Video, and is currently available on iTunes and Netflix. In addition to Skirt, a romantic comedy that won the Grand Prize in the Cynosure Screenwriting Competition (for stories with women and minority protagonists), Johnson is also developing Static, a psychological horror-sci-fi set in a small California town. He was a mentor in Film Independent’s Project:Involve and has taught screenwriting at Amherst College and Rutgers University.

Kate Stayman-London is a writer and a current candidate for an MFA in Writing for Film and Television at USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. Her first solo screenplay, a baseball sex comedy called Slump Busters, was awarded the Frank R. Volpe Scholarship and the National Association of Theater Owners Scholarship. She was also selected by Steven Bochco for his five-person pilot class based on her spec episode of Dexter. Before moving to Los Angeles, Stayman-London worked in Washington, DC (and on campaign trails across America) as a political operative for the labor movement, ending with a stint as Deputy Field Director for the AFL-CIO’s 3+ million retirees. Stayman-London has strong roots in playwriting: at Amherst College, she studied with acclaimed playwright Connie Congdon, and she’s currently writing the book for the next musical from this year’s Ovation Award winner, Erin Kamler.

7. The Stones – In modern-day Tehran, a progressive youth-culture exists underground, but when a gay Iranian/American boy visits his motherland for the first time, he quickly learns the high price of rebellion in the hard-line Islamic regime.

Ana Lily Amirpour, a writer/director/producer, made her first film at the age of twelve: a horror movie starring the guests of a slumber party. She comes from a varied background in the arts, including painting, sculpting, and playing bass and singing in a rock band. Her feature-length script, The Stones, was grand prize winner of the 2007 Bluecat Screenwriting Competition, participant in the 2009 Tribeca All-Access program, and winner of the 2009 Adrienne Shelly Fellowship. She has directed award-winning short films and music videos, and will direct The Stones as her debut feature film in 2010. Her 2008 short film Six and a Half, screened at festivals worldwide, including Slamdance, Nashville, Brooklyn, and Milan, and was a Golden Ace winner at the Las Vegas International Film Festival. Her 2009 short film True Love, a comedy about sex and relationships, won the Audience Award at the 2010 Milan International Film Festival; and her most recent film, Ketab ‘The Book,’ which is an excerpt from The Stones, will screen in 2010 in New York in connection with the Tribeca All-Access program. Amirpour was recipient of the Dini Ostrov Award in Comedy Writing in 2008 and is most recently a participant of the 2010 Talent Campus at Berlinale. She finished her MFA in 2009 at the UCLA School of Film and Television. She is co-founder of Los Angeles based production company, Say Ahh… Productions, creators of cutting-edge film, TV, music video, and web content.

8. Things We’ve Made – Set in the near future, a human clone shattered by the recent diagnosis of a genetic disease, embarks on a journey to find his original donor and the cure that can save him.

Trevin Matcek is a writer/director and has made movies since he was 10 years old. A graduate of USC’s Film Production program, his first 35 mm short Sylvia, won the Gold Award for Best Student Short at Houston Worldfest and played at over a dozen festivals around the world. After working several years in post-production, Matcek began directing and editing music videos for bands such as Spoon and Clearlake. In 2003, he directed “The District Sleeps Tonight”video for The Postal Service, which was Fuse TV’s #3 Video of the Year and nominated by the Music Video Production Association for Best Video under $10,000. Most recently, he has worked on campaigns for NFL Sports and Sony’s PS3 (Webby® award-winning). In 2008, IFP selected Matcek’s script Things We’ve Made as an Emerging Narrative Finalist and was recently accepted in Film Independent’s Directors Lab. Matcek is also part of the Dublab Collective, helming Vision Version videos for artists The Excepter and Baby Dee.

9. Working Man – After losing his factory job, an aging assembly line lifer returns to work at his closed plant only to become an unexpected and reluctant hero.

Robert Jury has written feature film screenplays for Twentieth Century Fox, Walt Disney Studios, and HBO Films. Jury is a past winner of the Walt Disney Studios Writers’ Fellowship and a member of the Writers Guild of America, West. He has worked in feature development for production companies with deals at Touchstone Pictures and Warner Brothers. He was a freelance segment producer for ESPN and BET, a production coordinator for Universal Studios Florida and a stage manager for ABC Sports. Jury has also served as managing editor for a magazine, coached high school football, taught art to kids and produced a video for the American Alligator Association.

10. Xanadu – An inveterate tomboy doggedly tries to win over the new girl in town, despite the uproarious machinations of her flamboyant older brother.

Susan Austin is a writer and valedictorian graduate of UCLA film school, where she was recognized for her films Voodoo and Tighter, winning the Peter Stark Memorial Scholarship and the Gene Reynolds Award. She worked as a script reader for Silver Lion Films and Penny Marshall’s Parkway Productions before returning to UCLA for an MFA in Screenwriting. Austin is currently directing a documentary This American Death, which examines why a “good death” is difficult to achieve, and continuing work on two features including her latest screenplay Viveka, about a white American woman who gets hooked on the idea of an arranged marriage.

ABOUT FILM INDEPENDENT

Film Independent is a non-profit arts organization that champions independent film and supports a community of artists who embody diversity, innovation, and uniqueness of vision. Film Independent helps filmmakers make their movies, builds an audience for their projects, and works to diversify the film industry. Film Independent’s Board of Directors, filmmakers, staff, and constituents, are comprised of an inclusive community of individuals across ability, age, ethnicity, gender, race, and sexual orientation. Anyone passionate about film can become a member, whether you are a filmmaker, industry leader, or a film lover. With over 250 annual screenings and events, Film Independent provides access to a network of like-minded artists who are driving creativity in the film industry. Film Independent offers free Filmmaker Labs for selected writers, directors, and producers; provides cut-rate services for filmmakers; and presents year-round networking opportunities. Film Independent’s mentorship and job placement program, Project:Involve, pairs emerging culturally diverse filmmakers with film industry professionals. Film Independent produces the Los Angeles Film Festival, celebrating the best of American and international cinema and the Spirit Awards, a celebration honoring films and filmmakers that embody independence and dare to challenge the status quo.

For more information or to become a member, visit FilmIndependent.org and on Facebook and Twitter.