All Entries in the "James River Film Society" Category
James River Filmmakers Forum on Feb. 25
Come celebrate local filmmaking with our quarterly James River Filmmakers Forum on Saturday, February 25, 8 p.m. at the Visual Arts Center of Richmond. This is a free event — donations encouraged!
In particular, come support these filmmakers:
Todd Raviotta, Untitled, animation photomontage, 6 minutes
Austin Journey (Lynchburg, VA), The Human Condition, 12 minutes
Hannah Sutherland Memories of Aging, Coney Island, sci-fi, 5 minutes
Evelyn Fisher, The Wanderer, experimental, 6 minutes
Joseph Weindl, clip from Antihero, comedy, 20 minutes
Carlton Kotalo, clip from Alien Face Bashers, sci-fi comedy, 10 minutes
First James River Shorts a success!
The inaugural James River Shorts film festival was a resounding success. A special thanks to guest juror and experimental filmmaker Roger Beebe for making James River Shorts one of the stops on his Fall 2011 ONE to EIGHT REDUX tour.
James River Shorts got underway on Thursday, November 10, with an eclectic program of shorts. Special thanks to Bob Kaputof, Joseph Caldwell, Christopher Harris, Fred Styles & Katherine Barnier, Mark Strandquist and H. Paul Moon for participating in our opening night’s screening. As a bonus, audience members were treated to a special tribute screening of the late George Kuchar‘s classic film, Hold Me While I’m Naked (read his NY Times obituary). We were all dazzled by the brilliant color and condition of the 16mm print provided by Canyon Cinema, one of the principal distribution sources for independent, experimental and avant-garde film today. Thanks to Dominic Angerame and the rest of the Canyon staff!
Our main event was the Friday, Nov. 11 screening of James River Shorts finalists’ films at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. More than 250 people attended a fabulous evening featuring 14 films from around the country.
Congrats to all the filmmakers selected by the James River Shorts jury as finalists. Again, they are:
The Treezilla!, 6 min., Shawn Hambright & Joey Tran (VA)
A Brief Vacation, 10 min., Ben Rinehardt (VA)
Eyeliner, 4 min., Joanna Priestley, (OR)
Mijo (My Son), 9 min. Chithra Jeyaram (MD)
Phosphena, 4 min., Maya Ederlyi (CA)
The Pervert, 4 min., Adam Rosenberg (VA)
Watercolors, 13 min., Ann Deborah Levy (NY)
Faces, 2 min., Duy Nguyen (VA)
The Good River, 18 min., Shannon Lynch (18 mins.) (CA)
Solo Piano NYC, 5 min., Anthony Sherin (NY)
Another Dress, Another Button, 3 min., Lyn Elliot (MO)
The Leaf Woman and the Centaur, 3 min., Jordan Bruner (NY )
Monarda, 8 min., Walter Ungerer (ME)
Dolls vs. Dictators, 11 min., Martha Colburn (NY)
And the winners were …
1st prize ($600):  Solo Piano NYC by Anthony Sherin (NY)
2nd Prize ($400):  Mijo (My Son) by Chithra Jeyaram (MD)
3rd Prize (tie, $250 each): Â Another Dress, Another Button by Lyn Elliot (MO) and Phosphena by Maya Ederlyi (CA)
VA Filmmaker Award (tie, $250 each):  The Treezilla! by Shawn Hambright & Joey Tran and Faces by Duy Nguyen
People’s Choice Award (voted on by the audience): Solo Piano NYC by Anthony Sherin (NY)
We closed out James River Shorts with Roger Beebe’s amazing “expanded cinema” performance of FILMS for ONE to EIGHT PROJECTORS and a beautiful music+film event featuring Jonathan Vassar & The Speckled Bird performing live with films by Matt Flowers and Kevin Gallagher.
Thanks again to all the filmmakers, all of you who came out to watch and experience, and to the Virginia Film Office, TVJerry/Jerry Williams, VMFA, Linden Row Inn and the Visual Arts Center of Richmond for helping make James River Shorts possible.
James River Filmmakers Forum on Nov. 17
Come out and support local filmmakers at James River Film Society’s quarterly James River Filmmakers Forum on Thursday, November 17 at 8:00 p.m. at the Visual Arts Center of Richmond. After the screening JRF Forum organizer Jeff Roll will moderate a panel discussion/Q&A with the filmmakers and audience.
The lineup for the November 2011 James River Filmmakers Forum is:
Ken Hopson – Lo-Fi Soundtracks – Music Videos- 6 minutes
Jasce Burrow – Samsara – dark sci-fi – 15 minutes
Kevin Haraldo, Randy West, & Bryce McCormick - Adventures of S-Team - Comic adventure – 9 minutes
Belinda Haikes – Finch/Crow/Cardinal – experimental animation – 6 minutes
John Hendershot - Press Play – experimental animation – 8 minutes
Dr. Shawn Utsey – Until the Wells Run Dry: Medicine and the Exploitation of Black Bodies (excerpt) documentary – 15 minutes
James River Shorts: “Direct Filmmaking” Workshop
Due to low enrollment and the Richmond Marathon (what were we thinking?!), we’ve decided to cancel and reschedule this and the Super 8/Hand Processing workshop during our 19th James River Film Festival, April 12-18, 2012. Stay tuned!
HAND PAINTING ON FILM “DIRECT FILMMAKING” WORKSHOP @ VisArts
Saturday, Nov. 12, 11:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Direct Filmmaking Workshop
Instructor : Steve Cossman of MONO NO AWARE
In this workshop students will learn to manipulate the surface of the film using a variety of direct film-making techniques; painting, scratching, collage, and masking in order to create an experimental film on 16mm. This intensive workshop is designed to introduce, explore and master (on some level) the ability to articulate movement through the tactile gesturings of this beautiful cinematic language. The course will meet for 5 hours beginning with a brief history of filmmakers using these methods along with their contemporaries. After instruction students will get their hands dirty almost immediately. The goal is to have each participant create a short, well developed direct film work, that we will screen at the end of the session. Students will walk away with hands on experience of direct filmmaking, a finished film work, the knowledge to continue to work in this practice at home and a list of venues to pursue for exhibition. All materials will be provided for. Workshop limited to 12 participants; will run with 8.
Visit the VisArts Calendar page to register (scroll down page).
James River Shorts: Filmmaking/Hand Processing Workshop

hand processed, hand coloured super 8 film strip collage from the Aphids 2008 collaboration with Ensemble Offspring 'Waiting To Turn Into Puzzles'. Images created by Louise Curham as ground for musical notation by composer David Young. Project is copyright Curham and Young 2008.
Due to low enrollment and the Richmond Marathon (what were we thinking?!), we’ve decided to cancel and reschedule this and the Hand Painting/”Direct Filmmaking” Workshop during our 19th James River Film Festival, April 12-18, 2012. Stay tuned!
SUPER 8 MM FILMMAKING & HAND PROCESSING WORKSHOP @ VisArts
SATURDAY, NOV. 12 10:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. (films processed between 4-6 p.m.).
Instructors : Sean Hanley & Joshua Lewis of MONO NO AWARE
Learn the art and craft of 18 frames per second filmmaking. This will be a hands-on class designed for the beginner that covers the basic aspects of Super-8mm filmmaking: cameras, story, timing (exposure), editing in camera and sound options.  Students will conceive, shoot and edit their own silent one-reel films in one afternoon.  After the shoot we’ll dive straight into hand-processing. Hand processing fosters a particularly intimate understanding of film as a material object and can produce a variety of effects that cannot be achieved by professional lab services. In this part of the workshop, students will be given all of the information necessary to start their own home operation. We will go over key chemical reactions, mix our own chemistry, and each student will take their 50’ roll of film through each stage of the reversal process. All chemicals and equipment will be provided. Participants should wear old clothing.  Finished projects will be presented at the conclusion of the course as part of the festival.  We will also discuss alternatives to projection and how to promote your short film work with a list of S-8 friendly film festivals. Class limited to 12 participants; will run with 8.
Visit the VisArts Calendar page to register (scroll down page).
James River Shorts 2011 Music + Film
James River Shorts 2011 wraps with a treat: Live music + film performances courtesy of Jonathan Vassar & The Speckled Bird, including the premiere of the brand new music video (directed by Kevin Gallagher) for their single “Turn to Face the Wind.† +  Stick around for the James River Shorts after party with music by Jonathan Vassar & The Speckled Bird. Admission FREE. Cash bar courtesy of VisArts.
James River Shorts Finalists @ VMFA Nov. 11
James River Shorts 2011 continues with a screening of James River Shorts finalists on Friday, November 11, 6:30 p.m. at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. To purchase advance tickets visit the VMFA’s website.
Congratulations to the filmmakers:
The Treezilla!, 6 min., Shawn Hambright & Joey Tran (VA)
A Brief Vacation, 10 min., Ben Rinehardt (VA)
Eyeliner, 4 min., Joanna Priestley, (OR)
Mijo (My Son), 9 min. Chithra Jeyaram (MD)
Phosphena, 4 min., Maya Ederlyi (CA)
The Pervert, 4 min., Adam Rosenberg (VA)
Watercolors, 13 min., Ann Deborah Levy (NY)
Intermission
Faces, 2 min., Duy Nguyen (VA)
The Good River, 18 min., Shannon Lynch (18 mins.) (CA)
Solo Piano NYC, 5 min., Anthony Sherin (NY)
Another Dress, Another Button, 3 min., Lyn Elliot (MO)
The Leaf Woman and the Centaur, 3 min., Jordan Bruner (NY )
Monarda, 8 min., Walter Ungerer (ME)
Dolls vs. Dictators, 11 min., Martha Colburn (NY)
Immediately after the screening guest juror and experimental filmmaker Roger Warren Beebe will assist the local jury in the James River Shorts awards presentation — giving out up to $2,000 in cash awards. The audience will have the opportunity to vote for the People’s Choice Award.
To purchase advance tickets visit the VMFA’s website.
James River Shorts 2011, Day 1
James River Shorts kicks off Thursday, November 10 at 8:00 p.m. at the Visual Arts Center of Richmond with an eclectic screening that includes:
- 5 very short shorts by VCUarts Kinetic Imaging associate professor and filmmaker, Bob Kaputof. Films include: Birds of Hong Kong, Bob In Front of the Camera, I Visited Italy Once, I’ll Change Someday and A Sea Turtle is Like What.
- A tribute to the life and career of George Kuchar (1942-2011) with a 16mm screening of his 1966 classic, Hold Me While I’m Naked. Ken Kelman had this to say about the film: “A very direct and subtle, very sad and funny look at nothing more or less than sexual frustration and aloneness. In its economy and cogency of imaging, HOLD ME surpasses any of Kuchar’s previous work. The odd blend of Hollywood glamour and drama with all-too-real life creates and inspires counterpoint of unattainable desire against unbearable actuality.”
- A screening of five James River Shorts “films on the bubble” — films that weren’t selected as James River Shorts finalists (which will screen Friday, November 11 at the VMFA) but the jury asked that we program. Films included are:
Boots, 7 min., Joseph Caldwell (VA)
Descending Figures, 3 min., Christopher Harris (FL)
Bluegrass Skyline, 30 min., Fred Styles & Katherine Barnier (VA)
Convention, 5 min., Mark Strandquist (VA)
Time Crunch, 5 min., H. Paul Moon (VA)
Tickets may be purchased in advance via Eventbrite (bottom of this page) or at the door 30 minutes prior to the show.
Giovanni Furore/H.P. Lovecraft: “Pickman’s Model”
H.P. Lovecraft‘s 1926 short story, Pickman’s Model, was published in the October 1927 issue of Weird Tales. In 2007, Giovanni Furore adapted it into a short film of the same name. Here’s a teaser for our Oct. 20 Halloween Horror Showcase screening:
Halloween Horror Showcase
Join us for JamesRiverFilm@VisArts Third Thursdays’ Halloween Horror Showcase featuring the short film Pickman’s Model (dir: Giovanni Furore, 30 min., 2007, in Italian with English subtitles) based on H.P. Lovecraft’s short story by the same name, written in 1926 and first published in the October 1927 issue of Weird Tales.
The main feature of the evening is the 1988 cult classic, Pumpkinhead (86 min.), starring Lance Henriksen (Millennium, Near Dark, Aliens) and directed by master visual effects artist Stan Winston, a Richmond native! Actual Pumpkinhead props will be on display, provided by horror film historian Doc Gillespie of Goblin Market in Hollywood and Diabolik.
Participate in our horror trivia contest with DVD prizes from Fangoria magazine, and enjoy free popcorn, Halloween candy and other treats. Cash bar courtesy of VisArts.
Admission is free; however treats (donations) are encouraged!
The evening was curated by Jeff Roll (James River Film Society), Phil Ford (WRIR-97.3 LPFM, Richmond Independent Radio), Bobby Morgan (Geeks of Doom) and Doc Gillespie.
M.A. Littler and “The Kingdom of Survival” in Style

Want to know more about The Kingdom of Survival and M.A. Littler? Read Wayne Melton’s great piece, In Chomsky We Trust, in the September 14, 2011 edition of Style Weekly. See you Saturday night.
Watch “The Folk Singer” trailer
Immediately following the screening and discussion of The Kingdom of Survival, ” … rejoice in one another’s sharing of pain!” with a screening of M. A. Littler’s film, The Folk Singer - A Tale of Men, Music & America (2008, 104 min., English).
JamesRiverFilm@VisArts: Flaherty on the Road
Non-preconception is the pre-condition to discovery, because it is a state of mind. When you do not preconceive, then you go about finding out. There is nothing else you can do. You begin to explore. ‘All art,’ said Robert Flaherty, ‘is a kind of exploring. To discover and reveal is the way every artist sets about his business.’ The explorers, the discoverers, are the transformers of the world. […] Above all, they are the artists, the poet, and the seer, who out of the crucible of new fact and new idea bring new life, new power, new motive, and a deep refreshment. They discover for us the new image. From The Odyssey of a Filmmaker: Robert Flaherty’s Story (1960), by Frances Flaherty.
The James River Film Society continues its JamesRiverFilm@VisArts Third Thursdays series on Sept. 15 with one of the three 2011 Flaherty on the Road programs. James River Film Society co-founder James Parrish, who attended the 57th Robert Flaherty Seminar as a fellow, will briefly introduce the program and the Flaherty Seminar format — the audience will be treated to three films totaling 72 minutes. Just like the Flaherty Seminar, the films to be screened will not be announced in advance. After the screening, notes on the films watched will be handed out, there will be a 15 min. break for refreshments, followed by a discussion facilitated by Parrish. Tickets are $8 ($5 for JRFS members) and available for purchase in advance via Eventbrite or at the door 30 minutes prior to the show.
Drawn from the program of the 57th Annual Robert Flaherty Film Seminar programmed by Dan Streibel, the 2011Â Flaherty on the Road film series explores the audio dimension of documentary. These selections present sound in its various roles in nonfiction film: as an element to confirm the fidelity of visual evidence (synch sound), as the conveyor of narrative (the voice-over), as evidentiary recording (the interview) and as a creative tool to counterpoint images. In three thoughtfully curated programs combining long-form pieces with shorts, the 2011Â Flaherty on the Road series reveals how sound recording and design can help capture a cultural environment, sculpt a sense of place or evoke a historical period. And it urges us to see the contradictions that arise as music is added to the mix and moments of truth are either powerfully underscored or called into question.
The Robert Flaherty Film Seminar is named after Robert Flaherty (1884-1951), who is considered by many to be the father of the American documentary. Flaherty’s groundbreaking documentary of Eskimo life, Nanook of the North is among the most noted films of the silent era. He was also the creator of such classic poetic films as Moana, Man of Aran, and Louisiana Story. The Seminar began in 1955-before the era of film schools-when Flaherty’s widow, Frances, convened a group of filmmakers, critics, curators, musicians, and other film enthusiasts at the Flaherty farm in Vermont. For more than fifty years the Flaherty Seminar has been firmly established as a one-of-a-kind institution that seeks to encourage filmmakers and other artists to explore the potential of the moving image. The films of such directors as Louis Malle, the Maysles brothers, Mira Nair, Satyajit Ray, Agnés Varda, John Cassavetes, Yasujiro Ozu, Pedro Costa and Joris Ivens were shown at the Seminar before they were known generally in the American film community. New cinematic techniques and approaches first presented at the Seminar have routinely made their way into mainstream film.
Preview “The Kingdom of Survival”
On Saturday, September 17, the James River Film Society hosts the Richmond stop on M. A. Littler’s U.S. tour with his latest film, The Kingdom of Survival. For ticket and other info, visit our Kingdom event page.
“The Kingdom of Survival” w/M. A. Littler, 9/17
The James River Film Society expands its JamesRiverFilm@VisArts series by hosting M. A. Littler’s Saturday, Sept. 17 RVA stop on the U.S. tour with his latest film, The Kingdom of Survival. Kingdom explores modern skepticism in America, challenges the status quo and uncovers provocative links between survivalist philosophy, ecumenical spirituality, radical political theory, and outlaw culture. The audience is invited into a thoughtful conversation with the likes of Prof. Noam Chomsky, Dr. Mark Mirabello, Ramsey Kanaan, and the riveting final interview with beloved author, Joe Bageant. These unique thought leaders cast a rare shadow of doubt over our most blindly accepted American traditions. By remaining observantly agnostic to the subjects, the film is able to honestly investigate the physical and psychological practices of diverse individuals in a conflict-ridden and confused post-modern world. In a time of brainwashing corporate and political propaganda, The Kingdom of Survival reunites us with the life-changing spirit of the outlaw highway.
Littler will introduce the film and answer questions afterward. For more info visit Slowboat Films.
Tickets are $10 and available for purchase in advance via Eventbrite or at the door 30 minutes prior to the show. Anyone who purchases a ticket for this show can catch Littler’s film, The Folk Singer, which immediately follows Kingdom, for free.







