27th JAMES RIVER FILM FESTIVAL April 22-25, 2021
Virtually presenting 9 programs in 4 days!
All screenings free (donations suggested)
Order your 2021 JRFF T-shirt HERE!
Full Program Below:
THURSDAY APRIL 22
8 pm*
One Man Dies a Million Times (dir: Jessica Oreck, 2019, 92 min.)
*Available only until 11 PM 4/22/21
Time is out-of-joint in this beautifully made feature debut by American director Oreck, a mix of history and sci-fi, a "true story set in the future". Ostensibly the love story of two botanists who meet while establishing a vital seed bank to ensure survival during the German siege of Stalingrad in WWII, the film is a tapestry of time and topics--about seeds and diversity, about love and war, about hunger of all kinds. And what it means to be human when your humanity has been stripped away. Somewhat reminiscent of Marker's La Jetee and Resnais' Night and Fog. A Richmond premiere!
FRIDAY APRIL 23
7 pm
True Uncut Tales from Andy Warhol's Silver Factory:
How Andy Invented a Superstar
& How Andy Discovered Lou Reed, the Velvet Underground, and Nico
(dir: Patrick Nagle and Catherine O'Sullivan, 2018, 105 min.)
When Andy opened the doors to the Factory in the mid-'60s, an inspiring muse appeared, Edie Sedgwick, who would become his most glamorous superstar. An unflinching portrait of the tragic "It" girl, and Andy's stable of unconventional superstars. Plus,
the history of Andy's collaborations with the Velvets, dating back to their earliest performances, and how Nico completed the picture. Directors Nagle and Shorr keep the stories moving with uncensored interviews of the participants and rare archival footage.
9 pm
Akran/ 37-73 (dir: Richard Myers, 1969/1974, 118 min./60 min.)
One of the most important of the American avant-garde filmmakers, Richard Myers' conceptual works rely heavily on sounds and imagery from his subconscious. He taught for many years at Kent State University and was a JRFF guest in 2001 and 2013. We offer these films with his kind permission.
on Akran:
"A work of ambition and great technical virtuosity--there's enough going on in Akran to command anyone's attention."--Roger Greenspun, NY Times
"Maybe the single most important event at this year's Chicago Film Festival...a work of overpowering originality forcing us to rethink our ideas about the film experience. It is the most influential film since Godard's early work."--Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
"A feature-length deluge of incessant, brilliant bursts of images, it creates a Joyce-like, dense and somber mosaic of memory and sensory impressions, a texture instead of a plot, a dream-like flow of visually induced associations realized to be a statement about America today--the alienation and atomization of technological consumer society is reflected in the very style of the film."--Amos Vogel, Film as a Subversive Art
on 37-73:
"I think 37-73 is an extraordinary work...I am astonished by his skill in image-making, and his power to evoke the crazy pain of being an artist. It is a haunting work with unforgettable scenes."--James Broughton, Filmmaker
"It is Myers' great and particular gift to be able to give exquisitely precise objective form to the stream of his consciousness so that it evokes a profound sense of recognition. It's as if he tapped our collective subconscious."--Kevin Thomas, LA Times
SATURDAY APRIL 24
4 pm
Comic Book Confidential (dir: Ron Mann, 1988, 90 min.)
Perhaps no other artistic medium of the 20th century displayed so much potential for expression yet was so overlooked or maligned A film history of the art of the comic book in America, 1930s-1980s, that deftly incorporates the social fabric of the times, which the comics mirror and satirize. The film interviews twenty-two artists and writers including Will Eisner, R. Crumb, Bill Gaines, Jack Kirby, the Hernandez Bros...Winner of the Genie Award, Best Feature Documentary 1989.
7 pm
Stalin Thought of You (dir: Kevin McNeer, 2008, 58 min.)
w/ On One Day of the Day of God (work-in-progress)
Stalin Thought of You is an in-depth look at Russia's greatest political cartoonist, Boris Elimov, who died in 2008 a the age of 108. A friend and ally of Leon Trotsky (the film contains home movie footage of the pair), Boris finds himself later working under Josef Stalin. Tensions build when Elimov is further compromised by the certainty that Stalin had his journalist brother killed. Director and Richmond native McNeer befriended the cartoonist in his last years and was given access to Elimov's home movies, which gives us a look inside the Red Curtain like never before--there's even a scene of Stalin supervising Elimov at work! Stalin Thought of You received its American premiere in 2009 at the 16th James River Film Festival.
On One Day of the Day of Gods (work-in-progress) The title comes from a traditional opening of folktales told on Soqotra, and the archipelago of islands off the coast of Yemen, whose millennia of isolation have produced a time-capsule: one-third of all plants and animals exist nowhere else. It's been called a "Second Galapagos'' and compared to Lovecraft’s' haunting fantasy landscapes. The inhabitants speak an ancient Semitic language that had no writing system a decade ago. But as with the rest of the planet, this microcosmos is under threat--developers eye the island's pristine beaches, and visitors enthusiastically introduce the Internet, plastics, English, and other double-edged gifts of globalization that have begun to unravel the ecology and identity of the islands. The film is a series of brief portraits: a woman makes incense burners, children harvest resin from the endangered "Dragon-Blood" tree, descendants of slaves battle a rough sea to bring in their day's catch.
**Kevin McNeer , a Richmond native, is a filmmaker and editor, based in Moscow, where he attended film school.
9 pm
From the Archives: "Music for Film" at the Byrd Theatre
In April 2000, the 7th James River Film Festival presented Tom Verlaine and Jimmy Rip live at the Byrd for a program of experimental silent films--and we recorded it on video for our vaults. Now 21 years later, you can enjoy! For Verlaine (ex-Television), working with the silent films was challenging: "There's no click track, nobody saying I want music for this scene, it's constant music".
SUNDAY APRIL 25
4 pm
Other Music (dir: Puloma Basu, Rob Hatch-Miller, 2019, 93 min.)
In 2016, in the heart of NYC's East Village, a long-time popular indie record store, Other Music, closed. More than just a record store, it was a scene, a hang out, a place to meet and bond, where bands were formed, record labels founded, careers launched.
Filmmakers Basu and Hatch-Miller met there too, and married. When the store closed, they'd been producing music videos, but decided to try to capture the essence of what had been--"we think it's important to celebrate what spaces like this have meant to people in the past". Featuring many famous customers and musicians--Animal Collective, Yeah Yeah Yeah, Interpol & more.
6 pm
Two Films by Patrick Gregory:
The Trouble I See ( co-dir: Sally O'Grady, excerpt, 2 min.)
In 2013, a father-daughter dance was held at the Richmond City Jail--and so began an intimate chronicling of the lives of three incarcerated men and their families. Shot over seven years, this is an excerpt from the project, currently in post-production.
China Series: pt. I 'One Morning' / pt. II 'At the Farm' (2021, 22 min. approx.)
From the filmmaker's notes: "In 2018 while visiting an organic farm outside of Shanghai, I awoke earlier than my hosts. With my camera, I explored a nearby village just then awakening from its slumbers. On returning to the farm, I witnessed and filmed their daily harvest. Fascinated as always by the myriad subtleties in everyday life, this is what I observed that morning in China".
** Patrick Gregory is a Richmond-based filmmaker, editor, and cinematographer and recipient of two VMFA fellowships, as a VCU student and also as a professional.
8 pm
Killer of Sheep (dir: Charles Burnett, 1978, 80 min.)
One of the groundbreaking American independent films, Charles Burnett captured, with his first feature, a more realistic slice of "African-American life" than audiences were used to seeing. Shot on location in 1972-1973 with non-professional actors, Burnett financed the film out-of-pocket and submitted the finished film for his UCLA thesis. The day-in, day-out poverty of our hero Stan, who works in a slaughterhouse trying to make ends meet in the Watts section of LA, evokes the Italian Neorealist films of Bicycle Thief and Shoeshine. The film existed for years without an authorized film score--it features vocals by African-Americans stalwarts Paul Robeson and Etta James --and was later fully restored by UCLA and distributed by Milestone Films. It was adopted into our National Film Registry in 1991. Burnett was a JRFF guest in 1999 and several years later returned to the area for the filming of Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property.
* Films are available for streaming ONLY at the scheduled screening times! Visit the website:
A huge THANK YOU to this year’s JRFF Sponsors!
"The Plague of Now" Premiere Tonight! 8PM!
Congrats to this year's JRSFS Winners!
3rd tier honorable mention goes to:
FREE MEAL – April Raine of Boise , Idaho $20 cash prize.
2nd tier honorable mention goes to :
THE MAROON BOMBER – Joshua Thomas of San Francisco $80 cash prize.
The next three honorable mentions will get a cash prize of $100 a piece .
THE LONGEST SUMMER Miecen Shen of Orange, CA $100 cash prize
CROSSING OVER THE DARK Jordan Ellis of Charlotte NC $100 cash prize
THE LITTLE TEA SHOP Matteo Servente and Molly Wexler of Memphis TN $100 cash prize
AND NOW WE GO INTO THE MAIN PRIZE CATEGORIES
4th place prize
THE AUDITION by Eric Liberacki of Detroit Michigan $250 cash prize
3rd place prize
MY FAMILY TREES by Roshi Givechi of New York $300 cash prize
2nd place prize
A PIECE OF CAKE by The Bragg Brothers of California $450
1st place prize
GOOD MORNING , THIS IS LANA by Sergio Vacarro of Brooklyn NY $600 cash prize
26th Annual James River Short Film Showcase Screening
Due to technical difficulties the film “The Longest Summer” will not be screened during the program.
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Thank you so much to our long time sponsors:
Congrats to this year's JRSS finalists!
Finalists:
My Family Trees - Roshi Givechi, New York, NY
Good Morning! This is Lana... - Sergio M. Vaccaro, Brooklyn, NY
Free Meal - April Raine, Boise, ID
The Little Tea Shop - Matteo Servente, Molly J. Wexler, Memphis, TN
A Piece of Cake - The Bragg Brothers
The Audition - Eric Liberacki
Crossing Over the Dark - Jordan Ellis, Hickory, NC
The Maroon Bomber - Joshua M. Thomas, Aptos, CA
The Longest Summer - Meicen Shen
These finalist will be screened right here on our website January 29th, 7:30PM EST, and the winner(s) will be decided by our guest judge! Thank you to all who submitted, and a special thank you to all of our judges! Be sure to come back here on January 29th to watch the finalist films and see who will take home a cash prize!
The 2020-2021 Judges:
Caryl Burtner is an award-winning conceptual artist whose movie-loving mother took her to her first movie, "The Snow Queen" at the age of two. Thousands of films later, and despite a growing collection of ticket stubs, she still watches avidly. She is proud to be a long-serving juror of the J R Short Film Showcase.
Tom Campagnoli remembers watching "Moby Dick" and Hitchcock movies with his father as a youth, and later worked for over a decade at the Biograph, Richmond's beloved repertory theater. He starred as Kosmo in the local animated cult favorite, "Futuropolis", directed by Steve Segal and Phil Tumbo. He is currently employed at UR Libraries.
Ken Hopson oversees "The Workshop" at VCU Libraries where for decades he has assisted the universtiy and Richmond community in shooting editing and converting video, in addition to 3D scanning, 3D modeling and 'extended realities'. His personal narrative is loosely based on an unscripted adaptation of a true story.
Jere Kittle is an award-winning artist, photographer and experimental filmmaker based in Richmond, where she attended classes in VCU"s Mass Communications Dept. and School of the Arts. She was a finalist in the London International Super-8 Festival: Straight 8, and one of six winners in the Phillips Collection juried show, "American Moments" in Washington, DC in 2015.
Kevin McNeer is a Richmond antive who studied filmmaking in Moscow, where he resides. He has produced numerous documentaries on subjects as varied as Russian animation and the exotic flora of Yemen, and his feature film, "Stalin Thought of You", won numerous international awards; Currently he's developing a feature based on "The Blind Owl".
Raasa Leela de Montebello is an award-winning filmmaker and actress who divides her time between NYC and Ashland VA. A graduate of NYU's Film program, she currently freelance edits and directs, organizes retreats and classes in foraging. In 2018 her film "Decay" won six awards in Richmond's 48 Hour Film Project including Best Picture. She was the 2019 Awards Judge for the JR Short Film Showcase at the VMFA.
Jameson Price is a local musician and multi-media artist, Vice-President of the James River Film Society and founder/host of Silent/Music Revival, for over 15 years pairing silent era films with live musicians who create spontaneous soundtracks for movies they've never seen before!
Todd Starkweather holds a PhD in English from Universtiy of Illinois-Chicago, where he first studied film theory. He has taught literature, writing and film studies at various universities in the past twenty years, and currently teaches English at Manchester Middle School. He is a supporting member and volunteer of the JRFS.
Awards Judge:
Jeff Roll is an award-winning photographer turned filmmaker, with a 15 year tenure as part of the JRFS, including curator/host of the "Filmmakers Forum" from 2009-2018. He currently curates via Contact the Facts Productions (w/ PJ Sykes), featuring documentaries on artists and musicians that would normally be overlooked by mainstream RVA venues.
Silent/Music Revival Holiday Edition with RIGHTER
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December Events!
The Price of Everything! (2018) Virtual Screening
The James River Film Society and Kino-Lorber are happy to offer a free virtual premiere screening of Nathaniel Kahn's The Price of Everything (2018, 98min.)
You can watch this film for free right here on the James River Film website! It will be available from 7pm Dec. 11th to 11pm Dec 13th.
This documentary examines the "high art" world with big name artists and power-wielding critics and dealers. Watch the trailer! See the movie next month! Participate in a post-screening survey (optional but encouraged)!
**special thanks to Trent Nicholas of the VMFA
A Holiday themed: Silent/Music Revival VIRTUAL event!
Sunday December 20th, 8PM Sharp
A Collection of Animated Holiday Shorts:
“Snap the Ginger Bread man in Alaska” (1928)
“Suzy Snowflake” (1951)
“Frosty the Snowman” (1950)
“Snap the Ginger Bread man in the moon” (1927)
“The Insects Christmas” (1913)
“Snap the Ginger Bread man in the witch’s cat” (1928)
“Felix the Cat in Eskimotive” (1928)
w/ spontaneous score by:
RIGHTER
@righter.rva
Donation based and broadcasting from:
JAMESRIVERFILM.ORG
Finally, don’t forget that the deadline to submit to the James River Short Film Showcase is December 15th!
more details can be found here
Consider this a reminder to submit your film to the 26th Annual James River Short Film Showcase! All submissions 20min or less will be accepted! Should your film be chosen, it will be screened at the VMFA and eligible to receive a cash prize! The deadline for submissions is 12/15/20, don’t wait!