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2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival Award Winners

2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival Award Winners

The 2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (SFIAAFF), which ran March 10-20, 2011 and presented by the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM), concluded with an estimated attendance of 25,000, including over 200 filmmakers, actors and other industry guests. 129 shows, more than half of which were sold out, created an exciting buzz throughout the 11-day event. This year’s program boasted 5 world premieres, 7 North American premieres, 4 U.S. premieres, and 25 San Francisco premieres.

Festival Director Masashi Niwano said: “SFIAAFF has long been the nation’s premiere showcase for Asian American and Asian films. But with 110 feature-length and short films from 20 countries, plus a host of interactive events, this year was CAAM’s most ambitious yet. We are delighted by the new ways the audience is engaging with the festival, and we look forward to seeing them at our 30th anniversary next year.”

2011 Narrative Competition
The narrative jury included Aseem Chhabra, Quentin Lee and Leonardo Nam.

Best Film: THE IMPERIALISTS ARE STILL ALIVE!, Dir. Zeina Durra
Jury Statement: Great filmmaking has to be courageous. This film has a clever and engaging script and an inspired sense of humor. Depicting a slice of life of an artist, it takes us inside the world of eccentric artists in New York and reminds us of the freshness of Wayne Wang’s CHAN IS MISSING.

Special Jury Prize: THE TAQWACORES, Dir. Eyad Zahra
Jury Statement: It’s an important thing for this film to be made because it shows the diversity of Islam that we don’t see in popular media. With well-drawn characters that we care about, the film is engaging to a universal audience.

2011 Documentary Competition
The documentary jury included Anita Chang, Jessie Mangaliman and Alex Rivera.

Best Film: MADE IN INDIA, Dirs. Rebecca Haimowitz and Vaishali Sinha
Jury Statement: An unflinching and surprising look at a rapidly growing industry that puts women’s bodies on a new global market.

Visual Achievement Award: SUMMER PASTURE, Dirs. Lynn True and Nelson Walker
Jury Statement: A lyrical treatment of an ancient living tradition – set against a harsh and breathtaking landscape – battling the forces of urbanization and the free market.

Award for Achievement in Citizen Journalism: OPEN SEASON, Dirs. Lu Lippold and Mark Tang
Jury Statement: A nuanced approach to an urgent contemporary issue – that of refugee and migrant struggles to find a home and justice in 21st-century America.

2011 Audience Awards
The festival moviegoers voted for the Audience Awards for Best Narrative Feature and Best Documentary Feature. Award winners were tallied based on paper ballots and a text-to-vote system. The 2011 Audience Award winners are:

Best Narrative Feature: SURROGATE VALENTINE, Dir. Dave Boyle
Best Documentary Feature: ONE VOICE, Dir. Lisette Marie Flanary


2011 Loni Ding Award in Social Issue Documentary

This year, for the first time, CAAM presented the Loni Ding Award in Social Issue Documentary in memory of the filmmaker, educator and activist’s commitment to illuminating the experiences of underrepresented communities. The award and a prize of $1,000, was given to director Sybil Wendler for her short film ONCE UPON A ROOFTOP, which chronicles the lives of the rooftop-dwelling population of Hong Kong.

Look for these award winners and more coming to a film festival near you.

2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival Trailer

2011 San Diego Asian Film Festival : Call for Submission

2011 San Diego Asian Film Festival : Call for Submission

The San Diego Asian Film Foundation (SDAFF) is proud to announce its 2011 call for entries. SDAFF will celebrate its 12th annual film festival season to an estimated audience of more than 20,000 during 9 days of film, live discussions with filmmakers and artists, panels, and exciting special events.

The San Diego Asian Film Festival is seeking competitive entries in the following categories: narrative feature, narrative short, documentary feature, documentary short, and animation. An independent jury selects winners in each category, along with the Grand Jury award, which are announced at the Festival’s Gala Awards Night on Saturday, October 22, 2011. Festival programmers also select a first-time filmmaker to receive the George C. Lin Emerging Filmmaker Award, which is accompanied by a cash prize.

Films/videos submitted must be directed or principally acted by an artist of Asian or Pacific Islander descent; or whose subject matter relates to
Asian or Pacific Islander culture.

Deadlines:
· Early Deadline: April 1, 2011 ($30 Submission Fee)
· Regular Deadline: May 2, 2011 ($40 Submission Fee)
· Late Deadline: May 20, 2011 ($65 Submission Fee)

The 12th San Diego Asian Film Festival is scheduled from October 20-28, 2011 at the Mission Valley UltraStar Cinemas at Hazard Center. All rules, entry forms, application, and festival info can be found online here. For more information feel free to contact at entries@sdaff.org or 619.400.5911. The San Diego Asian Film Festival is an event of the San Diego Asian Film Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to connecting audiences with the human experience through the Pan Asian media arts.

2010 San Diego Asian Film Festival Trailer

2011 Reel Asian Film Festival : Call for submission

2011 Reel Asian Film Festival : Call for submission

Reel Asian is Canada’s largest and longest-running showcase dedicated to contemporary Asian cinema and media arts from Asia, North America and all over the world. Annually, the festival attracts thousands of attendees to six exciting days of screenings, industry events and galas. They invite you to submit new independent films and videos of all genres by and/or about East and Southeast Asians. Filmmaker, submit by this week and it’s FREE!! Here’s the deadlines:

EARLY DEADLINE: APRIL 1, 2011 (NO SUBMISSION FEE)
FINAL DEADLINE: JUNE 1, 2011 ($20 CAD SUBMISSION FEE)

Send all submissions to:
Heather Keung, Artistic Director
Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival
401 Richmond Street West, Suite 309. Toronto, Ontario M5V 3A8 Canada

Applicants whose work has been selected will be notified by mid-September 2011. The programming line-up will be officially announced at the festival press launch on Tuesday, October 12, 2011. The 2011 Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival will take place on November 8 to 19, 2011. Get more details here.

2010 Reel Asian Film Festival Trailer

2011 Asian American Showcase in Chicago

2011 Asian American Showcase in Chicago

The 2011 Asian American Showcase presented by The Gene Siskel Film Center and the Foundation for Asian American Independent Media (FAAIM) runs April 1 through 14, 2011. The festival encompasses comedies and dramas, probing documentaries, provocative shorts, and an array of special activities, all showcasing a wealth of talent on the Asian American scene.

Some of the highlight in the festival include:
Opening Night: Surrogate Valentine
Closing Night: Saigon Electric
other films of note are The House of Suh, In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee, Mikado Project, and One Kine Day.

Surrogate Valentine Trailer

Saigon Electric Trailer

Complete Asian American Showcase 2011 – Schedule (all events take place at the Gene Siskel Film Center)

Date

Time

TITLE

4/1/2011

8:00 PM

Surrogate Valentine
(actor/musician Goh Nakamura & director David Boyle will be present)

4/2/2011

4:45 PM

In The Matter Of Cha Jung Hee

4/2/2011

6:30 PM

Mikado Project

4/2/2011

8:15 PM

“Seven” – Live Theater Performance by the Silk Road Theatre Project

4/3/2011

4:15 PM

One Big Hapa Family

4/3/2011

8:00 PM

Beijing Taxi

4/4/2011

6:15 PM

Redress Remix

4/4/2011

6:15 PM

Red Dust

4/4/2011

8:00 PM

Surrogate Valentine

4/6/2011

8:00 PM

Beijing Taxi

4/7/2011

8:15 PM

Living In Seduced Circumstances

4/8/2011

8:15 PM

Macho Like Me

4/9/2011

3:00 PM

UPRISE 2! presented by the Multi-cultural Youth Project

4/9/2011

6:00 PM

The House Of Suh
(director Iris Shim & producer Gerry Kim will be present)

4/9/2011

8:15 PM

Saigon Electric

4/10/2011

3:00 PM

Best of Chicago Filipino American Film Festival: Filipino American Shorts

4/10/2011

5:00 PM

One Kine Day

4/11/2011

6:00 PM

One Kine Day

4/11/2011

8:00 PM

Macho Like Me

4/13/2011

8:15 PM

The House of Suh

4/14/2011

8:15 PM

Saigon Electric
(closing night – director Stephane Gauger will be present)

King’s Speech Parody for 2011 SFIAAFF

King's Speech Parody for 2011 SFIAAFF

CAAM worked with director Tanuj Chopra (PUNCHING AT THE SUN, SFIAAFF 2006) to create this short piece that spoofs the King’s Speech and highlights this year’s 2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival with a focus on South Asian films and filmmakers. This parody features Pia Shah, Rasika Mathur, Sunil Malothra, and members of the CAAM staff. If you’re in the San Francisco area, swing by the SFIAAFF and catch some great films.

King’s Speech Parody for 2011 SFIAAFF

2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival

2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival

The Asian American Film festival season kicks off with the 2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival.  Here’s what you can expect from this year’s festival:

Opening and Closing Night
WEST IS WEST & SURROGATE VALENTINE in San Francisco, and UPAJ in San Jose
SFIAAFF is very proud to present WEST IS WEST, a rare kind of coming of age comedy, where both a teenage boy and his 60‐year‐old father are challenged to reach a new stage of growthunder trying circumstances. Patriarch George “Genghis” Khan (Om Puri) takes his family from England to Pakistan so that the young Sajid (actor’s name) learns a proper appreciation of the culture he never earned growing up in Manchester. In this follow‐up to the hit EAST IS EAST, what George doesn’t anticipate is having to face the life (including a wife and family) he left behind. As worlds collide, this hilarious twisted tale of intentions and dreams gone awry teaches  both a deft lesson that they won’t soon forget. It’s the debut feature film of Andy De Emmony,  who will attend the Opening Night festivities. CAAM again proudly rolls out the Opening Night Gala Reception red carpet at the stately Asian Art Museum amidst its luxurious new exhibit“Bali: Art, Ritual and Performance.” It’s always a special night.

The festival in San Francisco is capped seven days later with a World Premiere from a returningfavorite—writer/director David Boyle with SURROGATE VALENTINE, starring the multi‐talented local favorite Goh Nakamura. After Boyle and Nakamura collaborated on the music video for Boyle’s hit WHITE ON RICE (SFIAAFF ‘09), they reunited to co‐write a sensitive, charming feature  script, which, in time, blossomed into SURROGATE VALENTINE. Goh stars a musician (much like himself) who toils in the indie music scene with the burden of his gawky yet sweet personal  style. When he decides to go on what turns out to be the strangest tour of his life, he wrestles with the demands of new friends and old, along the way encountering deadpan situations and dilemmas that test his ability to cope. When romance comes into play after he reconnects with his longtime platonic friend Rachel (the fabulous Lynn Chen), Goh must decide to step up to the bat or give up on his dreams. Drawing favorable comparisons to the films of Andrew Bujalski and an older generation of American indies.

San Jose celebrates the 10th anniversary edition of SFIAAFF in the South Bay with a World Premiere for its own Opening Night on Friday, March 18 at the Montgomery Theater. Hoku Uchiyama’s UPAJ is a behind‐the‐scenes look at the creation of India Jazz Suites, a dance  collaboration between Indian Kathak master Pandit Chitresh Das and the tap‐dancing phenom  Jason Samuels Smith. UPAJ is a testament to friendship and collaboration across cultures, generations and art forms. Shot in India and the US, it captures the creative process and then presents the magic of the resulting tour. The Gala will follow at the San Jose Museum of Art, where its exhibit “Roots in the Air, Branches Below: Modern and Contemporary Art from India” will provide the perfect backdrop.

2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival PSA

World Premieres
SFIAAFF is proud to present five world premieres this year. In addition to the aforementioned SURROGATE VALENTINE (dir. David Boyle) and UPAJ (dir.Hoku Uchiyama) will be ALMOST PERFECT, dir. Bertha Bay‐Sa Pan; RESIDENT ALIENS, dir. Ross Tuttle; and TALES OF WARIA, dir. Kathy Huang. ALMOST PERFECT is a rom‐com starring the lovely Kelly Hu (known for  blockbusters like THE SCORPION KING and X‐MEN 2) as Vanessa, the benevolent workaholic who doesn’t have time to have a life until the dish Dwayne (breakout talent Ivan Shaw) suddenly pops up on the menu. Battling the comically dysfunctional members of her family all the way, she makes a break for happiness and fulfillment. Everything is ALMOST PERFECT. Switching to a  more serious mood is the documentary RESIDENT ALIENS, which follows the journey of 3 Cambodian deportees returned to Cambodia after a life experience of growing up in the States. A run‐in with the US criminal justice system has sentenced them to an existence where they are largely shunned by Cambodian society. With few skills and little money, each must find a way to survive, or end up on the streets. TALES OF WARIA is probably a first introduction for most in the West to the transgender community in Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim nation, and the ways this community copes with the paradoxes of sexuality within their nation and their religion. Four waria (the intersection of the words for man and woman) walk a daily and lifelong tightrope, and are generous enough to share their stories with filmmaker Huang, so that the understanding of this transgender community can be broadened.

Also of note is the large number of North American Premieres this year at SFIAAFF. They span  the breadth of the Festival’s wide‐ranging interests. Please check the program guide for synopses on these nearly first‐looks: ANNA MAY WONG: IN HER OWN WORDS, dir. Yunah Hong; AMIN, dir. Shahin Parhami; BREAK UP CLUB, dir. Barbara Wong; DANCE TOWN, dir. Jeon Kyu‐Hwan; EMIR, dir. Chito S. Roño; PASSION, dir. Byamba Sakhya; WHEN LOVE COMES, dir. Chang Tso‐Chi

Retrospective: After Death: Horror Cinema from South East Asia

Festival Director Masashi Niwano’s guilty pleasure is horror. With the assistance of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, SFIAAFF is happy to highlight three cold and clammy South East Asian classics from The Philippines, Thailand and Malaysia in After Death: Horror Cinema from South East Asia. Though they all feature some of the tropes of the horror genre, note the  stylistic variations they present. NANG NAK (dir. Nonzee Nimibutr, Thailand), is a tragic love story about a husband and wife who try to stay together even after death. AFFLICTION (Dir.  Richard Somes, Philippines) is part melodrama, part horror as a struggling father tries to save his daughter from a damned future. HISTERIA (Dir. James Lee, Malaysia) is camp at its best, as a  group of young school girls accidentally conjure a spirit from beyond the grave. The strength of these films is how they beautifully weave local folklore and superstitions into the stories, each glowing with cultural richness and cinematic panache. Consider that all were essential to the  growth of their national film industries, all the while entertaining millions.


Filmmaker in Spotlight: Gurinder Chadha

The 29th SFIAAFF is offering a fresh look at the works of Gurinder Chadha, a filmmaker with unusually deep connections to the Festival. Each year, the Festival is proud to offer reevaluation of the contributions of a special filmmaker to the Asian and Asian American experience on film. Born in Kenya, schooled on the streets of Southall and at the University of East Anglia, Chadha came to SFIAFF in 1994 with her debut comedic drama, BHAJI ON THE BEACH. Little did she suspect that with the memory of the Festival audience’s laughter and  tears…that she would also leave with a future husband. Her star collided with that of then co‐SFIAAFF festival director Paul Mayeda Burges, and neither has been the same since the encounter. They married soon thereafter and have collaborated on work, love and life ever since.

In 2002, her BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM offered SFIAAFF one of its most successful openers and also  a first glimpse at megastar Keira Knightley. We are proud to offer a reprise showing of that film’s special mix of energy and emotion. Chadha then brings her own insight into the Asian experience—while laughing all the way—with her latest IT’S A WONDERFUL AFTERLIFE, the story of a loving mother (Indian film legend Shabana Azmi) who’s willing to kill to assure a good  marriage for her only daughter Roopi (Goldy Notay). San Franciscans will abide her method— she kills through cuisine! The leading suitor who turns up also happens to be the inspector  (Sendhil Ramamurthy) investigating the murders. Love races justice to the finish line in this cross  between an old‐fashioned Ealing comedy and a steamy Bollywood potboiler.

Centerpiece Presentation
Vietnam’s biggest box office smash is this year’s Centerpiece presentation. Le Thanh Son’s martial arts epic CLASH draws on the best tradition of Hong Kong’s action classics but burns with  a modern aesthetic. Vietnam’s real life Brangelina—Johnny Tri Nguyen (as Quan) and Veronica  Ngo (as Trinh)—smolder on screen as crime partners and lovers in this high body count actioner.  “One last job before getting out of the game” gets updated in this battle between French mobsters, Vietnamese gangsters and a crime boss who is holding Trinh’s kidnapped daughter.  Director Le Thanh Son paints the action with a digital Red camera, allowing him to make CLASH  one of the most fast and furious and most entertaining action films ever at SFIAAFF.

Award‐winning filmmaker Ramona Diaz (IMELDA, SFIAAFF ’04 and SPIRITS RISING, SFIAAFF ’96) returns with a unique subject portrait of Filipina schoolteachers filling the gap where not enough Americans are willing to go. For a year, THE LEARNING follows four Filipinas who leave their homeland for the bewildering challenge of inner city Baltimore schools. This very human story is a conversation starter for many discussions, large and small—about No Child Left Behind,  American educational values, foreign guest workers, and about the women who personally sacrifice so much to teach in American schools.

Other Highlights from around the Hemisphere
South Asian is an obvious focus of the Festival this year. With South Asian films on Opening Night in San Francisco (WEST IS WEST) and San Jose (UPAJ) and with our honoring of Festival  alumnus Gurinder Chadha with a Filmmaker Spotlight, SFIAAFF continues to sharpen its appreciation for the cinema of the subcontinent. Please also look for Eyad Zahra’s
TAQWACORES, about the battles of misfit Pakistani Muslim punk rockers; Rebecaa Haimowitz and Vaishali Sinha’s MADE IN INDIA, about surrogate adoption in India; Lynn True and Nelson  Walker’s SUMMER PASTURE, pitting the seductiveness of modernity against ancient pastoral life in Tibet; and Mani Ratnam’s RAAVANAN, a modern re‐telling of the epic Ramayana legend. Any given year provides an unusual concentration of quality films from certain places. This year, SFIAAFF is estatic that Vietnam and Iran are special highlights. From Vietnam comes the Centerpiece film CLASH by Le Thanh Son, Stephane Gauger’s SAIGON ELECTRIC, Ian Gamazon’s LIVING IN SEDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES, and BI, DON’T BE AFRAID by Phan Dang Di. From Iran comes Shahin Aghaie’s AMIN, GOLD AND COPPER by Homayoun Asadian, Hossein Keshavarz’s DOG SWEAT and the short SPRING OF SORROW from Suzi Yoonessi.

Out of the Vaults: CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS

SFIAAFF thinks it’s time for a 21st century reconsideration of one of the most contentious figures in Asian American cinema—Charlie Chan. Before the subject can be broached, a clea understanding of the controversy must first occur. With the recent publication of Yunte Huang’s remarkable book, “Charlie Chan: The Untold Story of the Honorable Detective and His Rendezvous With American History,” a new conversation can start regarding the racist  stereotypes depicted on screen by Warner Oland and Keye Luke as the inscrutable detective and  his No. 1 son—the stereotypical monkeys on the backs of generations of Asian Americans. With humor and irony, author Huang explores a history of multiple layers and perspectives, allowing  new fans a rare opportunity to discover new dimensions to a story some may have dismissed too soon. Huang’s investigation into this most problematic of racial icons starts with the original novels and their author, Earl Derr Biggers, and then moves to Honolulu and the real detective (Chang Apana) on whom the character is based. Don’t miss the discussion with Huang after the screening of CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS, which ironically features the 1936 Berlin Games as its backdrop.

Narrative and Documentary Competitions, featuring works by first and second feature  filmmakers
The SFIAAFF always presents the best in new Asian and Asian American cinema in its Narrative  and Documentary Competition sections. A three‐person jury (freelance writer Aseem Chhabra, actor Leonardo Lam, director Quentin Lee) will judge films in each category. Award winners will be announced before the Closing Night screening on March 18.

This year’s Narrative Competition includes eight great, new independent works: ONE KINE DAY  (dir. Chuck Mitsui from Marin), a portrait of a slacker looking to swim against the Hawaiian  Islander current keeping him down; LIVING IN SEDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES (dir. Ian Gamazon), an  arthouse chiller/thriller; DOG SWEAT (dir. Hossein Keshavarz), which depicts the conflict between traditional ways and technology‐fueled modern life in Teheran; M/F REMIX (dir. Jy‐Ah Min), a recasting of Godard’s 1966 MASCULIN FEMININ; ALMOST PERFECT (dir.Bertha Bay‐Sa Pan) previously described; SAIGON ELECTRIC (dir. Stephane Gauger) set on the streets of Saigon about the lives of hip hop dancers; IMPERIALISTS ARE STILL ALIVE (dir. Zeina Durra), a comedy about a Palestinian American New Yorker considering her bourgie life outside the war ravagedMiddle East; and TAQWACORES (dir. Eyad Zahra), also described earlier.

The Documentary Competition features these eight worthies: MADE IN INDIA (dirs. Rebecca Haimowitz, Vaishali Sinha), TALES OF WARIA (dir. Kathy Huang), RESIDENT ALIENS (dir. Ross Tuttle), and SUMMER PASTURE (dirs. Lynn True, Nelson Walker) described above; ONE VOICE (dir. Lisette Marie Flanary) celebrates a native Hawaiian song competition; OPEN SEASON (dir. Lu Lippold, Mark Tang) investigates the case of a Hmong deer hunter who killed 6 white hunters in Wisconsin; THE HOUSE OF SUH (dir. Iris K. Shim) a provocative portrait of a brother and sister and the murder that connects them; and ANNA MAY WONG: IN HER OWN WORDS (dir. Yunah Hong) an deconstruction/reconstruction of the iconic actress.

2011 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival Press Conference