Showing posts with label LHAAFF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LHAAFF. Show all posts

Thursday, May 14, 2009

2009 Langston Hughes African American Film Festival Winners Announced

The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival (LHAAFF), an annual presentation of the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center in Seattle, Washington gives Northwest audiences a chance to view a diverse array of irreverent, poignant, provocative documentary and narrative films on topics such as youth, politics, history, social justice and relationships.

Films in the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival (LHAAFF) combine both call-for-work entries and curated films selected by the curator and committee. Awards are given to

call-for-work entries in three categories; Audience Award, Jury Award and Local Filmmaker Award. In 2009 the festival gave an additional nod to Short films as a separate category.



AUDIENCE AWARD - BEST SHORT FILM

PRODUCTION-USA 2008

Director: Lenny Payan, Writer/Producer Carmen Scott Payan

In 2006, Carmen L. Scott was beginning her first season as a writer's assistant at "Law & Order: Criminal Intent". When a rough draft of a script for a hip-hop themed episode of the show crossed her desk in December of 2006, one month after the Sean Bell shooting, she began blogging about the 16 days it took to shoot the episode and the uneasiness she felt helping the stereotype-laden script get filmed. Ultimately she would turn the blog into a screenplay, and with the help of husband and partner, Lenny Payan, into a short film.



AUDIENCE AWARD BEST FEATURE FILM

US: A LOVE STO
RY USA 2008
Director. Alrick Brown

JURY AWARD - BEST FEATURE FILM


US: A LOVE STORY USA 2008
Director. Alrick Brown
This haunting film explores impact and consequences of a union consecrated in blood. One couple's love story is a metaphor for the history of White/Black race relations in the USA. Filmmaker Alrick Brown continues to reveal himself as a "filmmaker to watch" winning two of the festival's most prestigious awards. Previous films by Brown include "Death of Two Sons", based on the lives of Amadou Diallo and Jesse Thyne, "Familiar Fruit" a modern day Greek tragedy that leaves the audience holding the torch, and "The Adventures of SuperN----", an allegory about the shooting death of Amadou Diallo.
All of these films have screened at the LHAAFF.



JURY AWARD - BEST SHORT FILM



5 Days in July revisits the 1967 Newark Riots, an important cataclysmic moment in American history. This civil disturbance began when African American cab driver and musician John W. Smith was arrested, beaten and dragged into Fourth Precinct for a minor traffic infraction. This action triggered rebellion among the African American community that spread throughout Newark. To quell the unrest, government officials mobilized the New Jersey State Police and National Guard.



LOCAL FILMMAKER AWARD

THIS IS...206 ZULU
(USA 2009)
Director Georgio Brown

Local filmmaker Georgio Brown takes a detour from 18 years of producing Coolout TV to create an intimate look at hip hop and social justice collective, the 206 Zulu Nation. The 206 Zulus are multicultural family of artists who form the Seattle chapter of the larger 206 Zulu Nation, and international social justice hip hop movement founded by Afrika Baambata. Candid discussion, performance and interviews with members of the collective.



About the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival:

The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival supports community building by providing opportunities for artists and audiences to connect using the medium of film as a catalyst for dialogue that leads to social change. The festival creates year round opportunities to enhance media literacy, self reflection, and community discussion. By creating the shared experience of films that are by and about Black people, the festival is a creative and collaborative opportunity to build cultural competency across the aisle and across neighborhoods in greater Seattle. www.langstonblackfilmfest.org

Sunday, February 22, 2009

2009 Langston Hughes African American Film Festival, April 18 - 26

· The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival (LHAAFF) is an annual event presented by the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center in Central Seattle. The LHAAFF presents films from independent filmmakers from around the world. The LHAAFF features panel discussions, screenplay readings, matinĂ©e screenings for middle and high school youth and in-depth discussions with filmmakers, industry professionals and local community leaders.

· The 6th annual Langston Hughes African American Film Festival takes place April 18-26, 2009. All screenings take place at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center (LHPAC), 104 - 17th Avenue South, Seattle WA 98144 at the intersection of 17th Avenue South and Yesler Way (Metro bus route #27).

· Visit our website, http://www.langstonblackfilmfest.org or blog, http://lhaaffbside.blogspot.com/ for festival updates. Recorded updates are also available on our telephone Info Line: 206-326-1088.

· Program schedule and film screening show times will be made public in March; there are screenings each day of the festival. Matinees take place on Saturdays and Sundays. There are evening screenings each day of the week. Filmmaking workshops will take place on Saturday and Sunday afternoons. There will be one after-school youth film screening on a weekday afternoon. Late night screenings take place on Friday and Saturday nights.

· Tickets and festival passes will be available online via BrownpaperTickets.com, http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/55821, or at the LHPAC box office after March 20, 2009.

· The address of the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center is 104 - 17th Avenue South, Seattle WA 98144 at the intersection of 17th Avenue South and Yesler Way (Metro bus route #27).

· We are pleased to attract diverse audiences every year. All are welcome.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

THANK YOU for your support!

2008 Festival: A Community Success
The Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center's Fifth Annual African American Film Festival was an amazing gathering of films, artists and community. We were all transformed in each others' company and moved by the power of cinema to bring us all closer together.

Art defines a person and a people. It effects all who participate. In 9 days, Langston's Film Festival ran the gamut from serious to funny, from fiction to reality, from short to long, from local to international, from first efforts to epics from seasoned masters. And the collective effect: we talked, we laughed, we cried, we cheered, we questioned, and we were together as a community.


A big thank you to all who made this event possible.
See you in September for the Underground Railroad Film Series.


AUDIENCE AWARD
1st prize - TIE: THIS IS THE LIFE, Ava DuVernay and PRAY THE DEVIL BACK TO HELL, Gini Reticker
Honorable mention - TIE: DEATH OF TWO SONS Directed by Micah Shaffer and produced by Alrick Brown and I’M THROUGH WITH WHITE GIRLS by Jennifer Sharp

JURY AWARD
1st prize: MORNING DUE by Barbara Allen
Honorable mention: SOMETHING IS KILLING TATE by Leon Lozano
Honorable mention: LALIBELA by Sentayahu Mengesha

LOCAL FILMMAKER AWARD
1st place: BEHIND CLOSED DOORS by Eddie Smith
Honorable mention: WOMEN TOGETHER AS ONE by Gilda Sheppard
Honorable mention: YOKES AND CHAINS by Michael Lienau

Monday, April 7, 2008

Festival Schedule and Ticket Sales are now live!


Please visit our website, http://www.langstonblackfilmfest.org/, for a full festival schedule and online ticket sales. You may also purchase tickets at the box office an hour before each screening or workshop begins. THe box office is on the ground floor of the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center, 104 - 17th Avenue South. The phone number is (206)386-1177.
Bookmark this blog -- schedule changes, updates, and news will appear here. Two Metro bus lines will bring you close to the building. Take the #27 or the #14.

We look forward to seeing you at this year's festival, and hope that you will enjoy the wide variety of films!

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Join us for our 5th anniversary, April 12-20!









Join us at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center, 104 – 17th Avenue South, April 12-20, 2008 for the annual Langston Hughes African American Film Festival! News about this year's films will be posted soon.

www.langstonblackfilmfest.org / http://lhaaffbside.blogspot.com / (206)326-1088

Photo: Inye Wokoma

Friday, October 26, 2007

American Ethnic Cleansing Explored in “Banished”, November 2nd

Groups Work Together to Host Seattle Premiere of Critically Acclaimed Film

Seattle, WA – Filmmaker Marco Williams will be on hand to discuss his widely acclaimed documentary, “Banished” as part of the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival Underground Railroad Film Series in partnership with the Seattle Office of Civil Rights and the Seattle Art Museum. The film will screen for the community Friday, November 2nd at 1PM at the Seattle Art Museum and 7pm at the Rainier Valley Cultural Center. Williams will also participate as guest speaker in the Seattle Race Conference held on Saturday, November 3 at the Seattle Center. Both events are open to the public.

BANISHED chronicles both the history and legacy of three southern Counties who practiced violent eviction of Black communities, burning their homes, lynching the men and appropriating their land.

New York Times writer Manhola Dargis describes this infamous period in history as a time when “Reconstruction died, and Jim Crow moved right in.” Director Marco Williams’ film patiently addresses this American tragedy with an unflinching and thoughtful investigation of racism, responsibility and land ownership.

The film not only reflects on the past, but also explores the impact on the descendants of these communities whose combination of silence and shame beg the questions of history, memory and contemporary justice। Throughout the film, Williams searches the recollections of current and past residents whose stories reveal the resident’s myopic sensibility, which keeps these towns mostly white today. Williams’ film delves into the impact of these violent expulsions and reframes the notion of reparations, providing thoughtful context to this complex subject.


The three counties studied, Forsyth County (Georgia), Pierce City (Missouri) and Harrison (Arkansas) remain virtually all white and their victims’ descendants remain uncompensated.
Filmmaker Marco Williams interviews both groups. Described as handsome, soft-spoken, articulate and unfailingly polite, critics site Williams as the perfect foil for drawing out KKK members and guilty liberals alike. He takes an incendiary subject and through force of personality weaves a thoughtful investigation of racism, responsibility and real estate.

Williams will be on hand Friday evening to introduce the film. The screening will be followed with discussion hosted by the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival and partners at the Rainier Valley Cultural Center. On Saturday, Williams will participate in the Seattle Race Conference, bringing excerpts of the film and inviting the conference's 300 participants to reflect on the work. Williams and co producers Working Films and the Center for Investigative Reporting have launched a national outreach program to discuss the issues raised in the film.

The Race Conference keynote will be presented by Dr. James Gregory, Director of the University of Washington Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project with presentation titled, "Remembering Segregated Seattle and the Civil Rights Movements that Changed Our City. This screening, community discussion and connection to the Seattle Race Conference will provide a powerful platform for Seattle and King County audiences to address our history and provide context for the issues of racism faced yet today across the country and in our own back yard.

The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival and Underground Railroad Film Series are programs of Seattle Parks and Recreation’s Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center. The Seattle Race Conference is presented by a coalition of community groups in partnership with the Seattle Office for Civil Rights and the Seattle Center. The Seattle Art Museum is the Pacific Northwest’s premiere venue for art, with more than 23,000 objects from across cultures, exploring the connections between past and present, connecting people to art.

Screening Date/Time/Location

Date: Friday, November 2, 2007

Time: 1PM City of Seattle Staff & 7PM Public Screening Doors at 6:30 ($5 suggested donation)

Location: 1PM Seattle Art Museum ; 7PM Rainier Valley Cultural Center

For info on the Langston Hughes Underground Railroad Film Series- www.langstonblackfilmfest.org

To register for the Race Conference visit www.seattleraceconference.org

For info on SAM, visit www.seattleartmuseum.org

Film Facts:

(USA 2007) 87 Minutes Official Website www.banishedthefilm.com

Director/Producer : Marco Williams

Co-Producer: Maia Harris

Editors: Kathryn Barnier, Sandra Christie

Camera: Stephen McCarthy

Sound: J.T. Takagi

Music Composed by: David Murray

Awards:

BANISHED won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the Miami International Film Festival, the Spectrum Award at the Full Frame Film Festival, and the Nashville Film Festival's Best Documentary Award.

Reviews-

“Williams plays on a distinctly American sense of decency by appealing to his audience's notion of property rather than justice: "We wanted to reintroduce the thought of reparation or reconciliation around an idea that's perhaps more tangible to people than solely reparation for slavery."” Charlie Olsky, Indie Wire

“Williams's very presence in the all-white communities he documents is a canny litmus test ... It doesn't matter that Williams is Harvard-educated, or that he's articulate and hip. As our director sits at a kitchen table in Harrison, Arkansas, listening to the local Klan leader matter-of-factly disclose his disdain for blacks, it's painfully clear that in many small (and large) towns throughout America, the legacy of banishment remains: Black people are not only unwelcome, but unsafe. Just ask the Jena 6.” Lisa Katzman, Village Voice

“It’s stunning how loudly the dead can speak, and with such eloquence.”
– Manohla Dargis, The New York Times

“Goes the extra mile by confronting the descendants of the perpetrators.”
– Time Out NY

“With a forceful and disturbing, and at the same time emotionally resonant sense of investigative inquiry, Williams fearlessly burrows into the depths of this hidden history with brave, unrelenting determination. A rare treasure in the annals of cinema.”

– Prairie Miller,
WBAI Radio

“Investigates the distressing and awkward situation that arises when African-American families
return to land where their ancestors were forced to retreat in the face of domineering racism.
Rather than following an activist agenda, Williams’s intelligent personal narrative raises
monumental questions surrounding ownership and retribution.”

Eric Kohn, New York Press

“A deft drilling down into a little-known or consciously forgotten-about piece of American history.
An important film that renegotiates the issue of reparations.”
– Williams Cole, The Brooklyn Rail

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Welcoming all to the 2007 Langston Hughes African American Film Festival, Seattle




Dear friends of the LHAAFF,

I extend a sincere welcome to all as the 2007 Langston Hughes African American Film Festival begins its fourth year. We appreciate the support of our community partners, sponsors, volunteers, and of course you, the audience.

It is with respect and pleasure that the LHAAFF Advisory Committee dedicates this year’s event to the memory of the late James Brown and Octavia Butler, who passed to the realm of the ancestors this past year. These creative giants each held a unique and compelling place of honor in their respective fields. Each produced work with a powerful cross-generational influence. The alchemy of Brown’s powerful stage persona and skills as a singer, bandleader, songwriter, and dancer combined to make a unique style. Even his recorded music could make you feel as though you didn’t want to stop dancing. Octavia Butler’s speculative/science fiction novels immerse the reader in the alternate world she creates. Familiar themes like time travel, telekinesis, vampires and alternate, sometimes dystopian futures for the Earth go in surprising new directions in Butler’s engaging storytelling. She is fondly remembered for her friendship and mentorship of emerging writers. Her characters and intellectually challenging storylines can make you want to stay up past your bedtime or miss your bus stop. We are hoping that you will have a similar “can’t put it down” reaction to the diverse variety of films on this year’s schedule; that you won’t stop dancing, but will enjoy as many films and workshops as possible this year.

There is work by filmmakers from a wide variety of ethnic and national backgrounds: African American, Black British, European American, French-Israeli, Ghanian-American, Jewish, African/Native American, South African, and South African/South Asian. Each day, stories from around the African diaspora express the complexity of Black life in fictional narrative and documentary forms.

To paraphrase the old saying, being Black ain’t easy, but it sure is interesting. Saddle up with the Black cowboys of Brooklyn. Explore the idea of Blackness in alternative, “what-if” scenarios of the present and the future (THE SPOOK WHO SAT BY THE DOOR, INVISIBLE UNIVERSE). Experience the musical and political scene of modern Nigeria with Fela Kuti’s son Femi.

At a Tanzanian flea market, a Muslim woman tries on a bra over her hijab, before one young man, a group of several planning to migrate and seek work in Europe or Canada, declares to the camera and by extension, the industrialized world, "I 'm not afraid of you or Osama." (SWAHILINI).

Hear from Black women and men working together to reduce violence, sexual and otherwise, in our communities (NO!, PEACE PROCESS). Ask yourself how the Middle Passage has lingering effects on your own life (THE HEALING PASSAGE). Look deeply into what was good and bad about Blaxploitation (MACKED, HAMMERED, SLAUGHTERED AND SHAFTED, surely one of the best film titles ever).

Part of the LHAAFF mission is a commitment to presenting independently produced work, and we are honored to have several films by talented local filmmakers. Please take the opportunity to meet them, participate in post-screening talkback sessions, and be a voice of appreciation and support.

Thank you for your support of the LHAAFF.

Zola M.

Curator