Category Archives: filmfestival

2010 Boston Asian American Film Festival

2010 Boston Asian American Film Festival

The Boston Asian American Film Festival (BAAFF) is dedicated to supporting Asian American films, filmmakers and audiences through opportunities to educate, interact, and engage the Greater Boston community on Asian American social and cultural concerns. This year the festival runs November 11-14, 2010 and showcases great films and videos spotlighting the Asian American experience. Here’s some highlights:

Opening Night – Today’s Special
Closing night – The Things We Carry

Other films and shorts of interest include : The People I’ve Slept With, Ajumma! Are you Krazy???, and When Five Fell. For ticket information and other details, visit here.

Today’s Special Trailer

2010 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival

2010 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival

The 2010 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival (PAAFF) will run from October 21-24, 2010 at the Ibrahim Theater at the International House (3701 Chestnut Street), the Asian Arts Initiative (1219 Vine Street), and the Comcast Center (1701 JFK Blvd). Here’s some of the highlights:

Opening Night Film – Colin Hearts Kay (buy tickets)
Centerpiece Film – Raspberry Magic
Closing Night Film – The People I’ve Slept With (buy tickets)

Other films of note include Wo Ai Ni Mommy (buy tickets) and SF Stories (buy tickets). Check out their website here for FREE screenings and other events. Free special events this year supplement traditional film screenings, including free parties on Opening and Closing Nights. On Thursday, October 21st at International House, prior to the Opening Night Film “Colin Hearts Kay” there is a free special event titled “Perspectives On Asian American Identity”, which includes a screening of the HBO special, “East of Main Street: Asians Aloud” followed by a discussion panel moderated by Nydia Han (6 ABC). At 6:00 pm on Saturday, October 23rd, there will be a free live Q&A titled “A Conversation With Greg Pak”, an award-winning director and Marvel Comics writer, moderated by Loraine Ballard Morrill (Clear Channel Radio Philadelphia) at the International House. Mr. Pak will be receiving the PAAFF ‘10 Emerging Voice Award. Signed door prizes and refreshments will be available.

2010 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival Trailer

2010 Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival

2010 Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival

The 2010 Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival will celebrate its 14th year as Canada’s longest-running and largest showcase of contemporary cinema by East Asian and Southeast Asian moviemakers from Canada and around the world. From November 9 to 15, 2010, the festival will present more than 50 films and videos from 12 countries, including Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, China, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Canada and the U.S. Reel Asian strives to develop programming that reflects the cultural diversity of Canada and increases public understanding and appreciation of the artistic, social and cultural contributions of those of Asian heritage through film. This year, the festival has been expanded by two days to provide an even larger selection of screenings and events! Highlights include:

GALAS & CENTREPIECE:
· OPENING NIGHT GALA: GALLANTS (directors: Clement Sze-Kit Cheng & Derek Chi-kin Kwok, Hong Kong 2010; Toronto premiere, director in attendance)
· CENTREPIECE PRESENTATION: GOLDEN SLUMBER (director: Nakamura Yoshihiro, Japan 2010; Toronto premiere)
· CLOSING NIGHT GALA: AU REVOIR TAIPEI (director: Arvin Chen, Taiwan/USA 2010; Toronto premiere, director in attendance)

CANADIAN PROGRAMMING:
· HOME — Reel Asian’s Canadian Spotlight on Desiree Lim
· ONE BIG HAPA FAMILY (director: Jeff Chiba Stearns) and MARKER (director: Louise Noguchi)
· REDRESS REMIX (director: Lesley Loksi Chan)
· Best of Canadian Shorts Presentation: ON THE FLIP SIDE
· TOILET (director: Naoko Ogigami, Japan/Canada, 2010) was shot in Toronto and features a all-Canadian cast
· SPECIAL PRESENTATION: SUITE SUITE CHINATOWN — a new commission of works by Chinese Toronto-based directors on the theme of “Chinatown,” with new music and a live performance by the Mary Ward Secondary School Stage Band

REEL ASIAN HEADS TO RICHMOND HILL!
As part of our initiative to reach new audiences beyond the downtown core, Reel Asian includes the Richmond Hill Centre for the Performing Arts in its official program and will be presenting Hong Kong blockbuster IP MAN 2 on October 18, and an encore presentation of this year’s closing night film, AU REVOIR TAIPEI, on November 15.

2010 Reel Asian Festival Trailer

2010 Reel Asian Festival Clip Reel

Colin Hearts Kay

Colin Hearts Kay

COLIN HEARTS KAY, a groundbreaking romantic comedy written, directed and illustrated by Emmy Award-winner Sebastian Conley, featuring hand drawn special effects, animation and an innovative blend of live action and cartoon illustration is about to hit the Asian American film festival circuit. It will be the opening night film at the 2010 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival. It will simultaneously make its Southern California debut as an official selection of the 2010 San Diego Asian Film Festival. COLIN HEARTS KAY recently won the Audience Choice Award and the Best Editing Award at the 2010 Brooklyn International Film Festival, where it made its world premiere. The film played to sold-out audiences all three nights of its screenings, prompting festival programmers to add an extra show to accommodate enthusiastic ticket sales.

Colin Hearts Kay is a unique, unequivocally edgy and heartwarming micro-budget gem that seeks to answer the age old question, “What is love?” The film tells its story through the memories of cartoonist Colin Jenson as he tries to uncover what went wrong in his three-year relationship with his girlfriend Kay. Colin’s pursuit of love suffers a setback when a handsome and rich rival, Salvatore, appears in Kay’s life. Ultimately, it’s up to Colin to erase the mistakes of his past and draw upon the lessons learned to win back Kay’s love. Shot entirely in Brooklyn and featuring a soundtrack of brand new music from Brooklyn bands, this indie feature is sure to capture the hearts of young audiences everywhere.

The film stars Noah Starr, a regular on the Food Network’s “Ask Aida,” “Late Night with Conan O’Brien,” and “The Late Show with David Letterman,” as title character Colin. Alongside him is Emmy Award- winning actress Emily Chang (“The Humberville Poetry Slam,” “The Lounge,” “True Blood”), who plays Brooklyn food blogger, Kay Ho. The film innovatively blends animation and live action, and is Conley’s feature film debut as director/writer.

Despite an extremely modest budget, the Conley Brothers managed to pull off extravagant special effects and beautifully cinematic shots. Relying on sweat, ingenuity, and most importantly the latest technology, the filmmakers labored
to create a cinematic experience equal to a project many times its budget level. From a color palette that resolves along with the character arcs, to rotoscoped frame by frame animation, to crane shots created without a crane to snow generated without a snow machine, it’s a truly amazing visual piece combining live action and ‘sketchbook’ cartoon animation. Incredibly, the film was shot on the transformative CANON 5D Mark II digital still SLR camera.

COLIN HEARTS KAY will screen in Philadelphia at the Ibrahim Theater at the International House on October 21 at 7:30 pm and in San Diego at the UltraStar Theater on October 22 at 9:15 pm and October 25 at 9:40 pm. Director Sebastian Conley and cast members will in attendance for a Q&A after the screening in Philadelphia. Actress Emily Chang and Benjamin Conley, Sebastian’s brother and producing partner/ cinematographer, will be present at the San Diego screenings. Both cities’ screenings will be followed by official Colin Hearts Kay after- parties. The film will also kick off the opening night at the New York United Film Festival on Friday, October 22, at Cobble Hill Cinemas, Brooklyn.

Colin Hearts Kay Trailer

About the Filmmakers:
Conley Brothers Productions is comprised of brothers Sebastian and Ben Conley (half-Chinese brother), who as a team have produced a wide range of video and animation content for a vast array of clients such as Conde Nast, NHL, Glamour and Subway. COLIN HEARTS KAY is their first feature film. Sebastian is a multiple award-winning director and illustrator whose animated series, BEING STANLEY, won an Emmy Award in 2007. A motion graphics and animation expert, Sebastian studied traditional cell animation at the Hanna-Barbera Cuckoo’s Nest production studio in Taiwan. He has illustrated five books and his cartoons have appeared on Good Morning America and in MAD Magazine. The Conley Brothers’ sick and twisted animated series, WeRBopBop, garnered several coveted awards based on user votes on Newgrounds, the Web’s largest flash animation portal. They live and work in Brooklyn.

2010 ID Film Fest

2010 ID Film Fest

ID Film Fest, a program of the Japanese American National Museum, is set to kickoff on Friday October 8, 2010 through October 10, 2010 in Little Tokyo, Downtown Los Angeles. This unique cinema festival – a weekend of Asian / Asian American film presentations and workshops, will open with the Los Angeles premiere of the critically acclaimed film Kit Hui’s FOG, starring Terrence Yin and Eugenia Wan. Hirokazu Koreeda’s much talked about film AIR DOLL is slated as the fest’s Centerpiece film and Ian McGruder’s THE THINGS WE CARRY will close out the three-day movie feast.

ID Film Fest was founded in 2008, by filmmakers Koji Steven Sakai and Quentin Lee who wanted screen compelling Asian / Asian American works that have not yet had a chance to show in Los Angeles. Now in its third year of running, ID Film Fest is a festival by filmmakers and for filmmakers who create Asian American content and/or of Asian descent.

“Los Angeles is a postmodern collage of cultures and identity,” says founder/filmmaker Quentin Lee. “Even within the broader umbrella of the ‘Asian American’ community, there are Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Filipino, Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian Americans. Further diversifying the community are the divisions between first generation immigrants and those who were born here. A crisis of identity is inevitable and necessary even though we fantasize a more utopian unity. ID Film Fest is proud to present contemporary works that examine, explore or celebrate the identity crisis in our diverse global Asian community.”

“Everyone’s struggle with identity is totally unique, but at the same time there are commonalities,” shares co-founder/filmmaker Koji Sakai, “What Am I? Am I Japanese American? Am I Asian American? Am I American? ID Film Fest is meant to explore those similarities and differences; and through both, my hope is that everyone will be able to answer the basic question: ‘What are you?’”

Previous filmmakers and artists who have participated at ID Film Fest include: Justin Lin, Michael Aki, Eric Nakamura, Margaret Rhee, Tony Huang, Ann Kaneko, Chris Chan Lee, Tad Nakamura, Jason Tobin, Rea Tajiri and Ming Lai.

This year’s ID Film Fest filmmakers and actors will include: PJ Raval, Jessica Sanders, Brent Anbe, William Lu, Feodor Chin (Golden Boy), James Huang (R E P R E S E N T and The New Adventures of Johnny Karate & Golden Delicious), Kerwin Berk, Hirokazu Koreeda, Kit Hui, Ming Lai (Journey of a Paper Son), Eugenia Wan and Terrence Yin.

One of this year’s ID Film Fest highlights will be the BATTLE OF THE PITCHES 2 and The API PILOT SHOOT OUT where filmmakers will get a chance to participate in a live screenwriting pitch session with industry execs and the finalists for the API PILOT SHOOT OUT will present trailers of their work in competition.

This year’s Centerpiece film, AIR DOLL from Hirokazu Koreeda, is based on the popular manga series Kuuki Nigyo. The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival 2009 and revolves around a middle-aged man whose closest friend is a life-sized doll. This isn’t just any sex doll though; it was made with a heart. So when the man goes to work during the day, the doll goes out and explores the world. The doll is played by the amazingly talented and beautiful Bae Donna (from the Korean film “The Host”). AIR DOLL portrays the loneliness and lack of human connection in not only Japan, but all industrialized big cities around the world. Koreeda remains of Japan’s most funny, poignant and prolifically skilled filmmakers.

ID Film Fest will run October 8 thru October 10, with all events taking place at the at downtown Los Angeles’ National Center for the Preservation of Democracy located at 111 N. Central Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012.

“I Make Films Because…” ID FIlm Fest 2010 Trailer

The Things We Carry trailer (closing night film)

2010 San Diego Asian Film Festival

2010 San Diego Asian Film Festival

The San Diego Asian Film Festival (SDAFF) is excited to announce its eleventh season which runs OCTOBER 21-28, 2010 at the Mission Valley UltraStar Cinemas (7510 Hazard Center Drive, San Diego, CA 92108). As one of the largest film exhibitions of its kind in North America, the SDAFF kicks off a brand new decade and 11th Festival with more than 140 films from 20 countries including Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Japan, India, Ireland, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, North Korea, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, and the U.S.

More than 100 filmmakers and actors are scheduled to attend including John Cho (Harold and Kumar, Star Trek), Aaron Yoo (21, The Wackness), Daniel Dae Kim (Lost), Justin Lin (Director Fast and the Furious), Justin Chon (Twilight), Danny Pudi (Community), Ellen Wong (Scott Pilgrim Vs The World) and Harry Shum Jr. (Glee, League of Extraordinary Dancers). The Festival will also honor CAPE (Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment).

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS:
• Opening night film on Thursday, October 21 with the U.S. premiere of LEGEND OF THE FIST, an epic Chinese martial arts film starring Donnie Yen

• Closing night film on Thursday, October 28 with Taiwanese crowd-pleaser, AU REVOIR TAIPEI

• Spotlights on trans-racial adoption (4 feature films) with most directors in attendance for Q&A

• Free Films at Four – every weekday at 4PM films are free to the public

• All fourteen short film programs including will be presented in HD for the first time

• Special events each night, including Gala Awards Dinner (Oct 23), live music showcase, and a panel celebrating the art of dance in films and music videos.

Since the Festival ends less than a week from the general election, the SDAFF is also promoting civic responsibility and democratic participation through a campaign called REEL IN THE VOTE, showcasing Public Service Announcements that were created by artists to encourage Asian Americans to vote.

2010 San Diego Asian Film Festival Trailer

2010 San Diego Asian Film Festival TV Spot