| 2004
Rural Route Film Festival: |
| |
| The
audience loves Monteith McCollum's Hybrid |
| |
| Alan
Webber gives away an inflatable cow door prize |
| |
| Mike
Schmidt and the lovely ladies of Idaho Red |
Hundreds of
people turned out on July 24th and 25th for the 2nd Annual
Rural Route Film Festival at Galapagos
in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Saturday night's 2nd show got
so packed that we had to sit folks on hay bales in the corners
(donated for props by NYC's Federation of Black Cowboys)...and
some people even chose to stand for the full 2+ hrs!
Filmmakers and
guests came from as far away as Montana, Kansas City, Iowa,
and the Netherlands to see an acclaimed solid line-up of
rural-themed films. Certain attendees were especially joyous
upon winning oddball rural door prizes such as cans of chewing
tobacco, videotapes from Appalshop, six-packs of PBR, and
Rural Route t-shirts, and virtually everyone helped themselves
to the free hemp granola bars donated by Nature's Path.
And the winners
are!...
Best Fiction - "Sobre La Tierra (Upon the Earth)"
by Argentina's Maria Florencia Alvarez
Best Experimental - tie between "Season on the
Move" by Montana's Cindy Stillwell and "Westless
American" by Erik Nelson of the Netherlands
Best Documentary - "Hazel Dickens: It's Hard
to Tell the Singer from the Song" by Kentucky's Mimi
Pickering
Thanks to Idaho
Red for their cutie-pie bluegrass music,
DJ Kentucky Straight, and to Galapagos's beer and bourbon
special, making for an all-around-rowdy-goodtime at the
Friday night opening party. |
| Excellent coverage from "The
Daily News", "New
York Press" and Brooklyn's own "Block
Magazine"! |
2004
RURAL ROUTE FILM FESTIVAL
(Click
to See 2004 Pics!)
Saturday,
July 24 – Sunday, July 25
Showtimes: 6:00-8:00 & 8:15-10:15 PM each night
Saturday,
July 24, 2004
6:00-8:00
PM
Westless American
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Erik
Nelson, 2003, 5.5 min., exp.
Western United States
Westless
American takes you on a sprint through six U.S. states, eight
national parks, eight national monuments, and seven state parks,
covering 9,000 miles in six minutes. It's an abbreviated
Forest Gump without Tom Hanks, or the box of chocolates.
Erik Nelson is a filmmaker and professional basketball
player living in the Netherlands. www.bottomunion.com
Pardon! Pardon! The Cajun Mardi Gras Chase (excerpt)
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Rene Broussard, 2002, 8 min., doc.
Gheens, Louisiana
Gheens,
Louisiana is a Cajun community about 30 miles from New Orleans.
It has less than 1,000 people, yet every year on Mardi Gras the
population increases to over 20,000. Trucks filled with
teen-aged boys and men dressed as ghouls attack the town bearing
switches. They chase the children to "beat the sinful stuff
out of them" so they can be clean for the lent. The children
can either fall to their knees and say "Pardon! Pardon!"
or make the Mardi-gras maskers chase them, often taunting and
daring them to keep on beating them. Far from abuse, these children
look forward to this annual festival as "just a very painful
game!" Filmmaker Rene Broussard is founder and director
of Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center in New Orleans.
www.zeitgeistinc.org
Putnam
Paul Myers, 2002, 30 min., narr.
Albuquerque, New Mexico
When
a body is found on the highway just outside of town, the Sheriff
of the rural desert village, Putnam, wanders around town reluctantly
looking for a friend he knows is guilty. Along the way he
runs into some interesting folks who each have their own stories
to tell. The soundtrack features Hank Williams, George Jones,
and the Old 97's.
Bright Eyes Lover I Don't Have to Love
James Frost, 2003, 4 min., music video
California
The
idea of an anti-MTV karaoke video was conceived by Bright Eyes
singer/songwriter Conor Oberst and director James Frost, and was
shot throughout southern California.
Frost has been making music videos since 1997 for bands such as
Royal Trux, Pearl Jam, and Buffalo Tom. The video he co-directed
with Alex for the Pernice Brothers' "Working Girls"
was featured in last year's Rural Route Film Festival. www.saddle-creek.com
El
Pozo (The Pit)
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Rachelle Dang, 2003, 5 min., exp.
South Randolph, Vermont
This
tightly edited diptych reveals two simultaneous actions set outside
a northeastern farmhouse. Director Rachel Dang creates a
landscape of reflections where the rhythmic movement of earth,
shovel, and hammer give the viewer a look into the past.
Sobre
La Tierra (Upon the Earth)
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Maria Florencia Alvarez, 2003, 8 min., narr.
Argentina
Sobre
La Tierra traces the path of two boys crossing the Puna Juje–a
Desert in northwest Argentina. Each carrying a bag, the
boys enter an abandoned house from two different roads and collapse
from exhaustion. The next morning they meet, and to their
surprise the two bags have become one. The gritty nature
of their argument is reflected in the texture of the super 8 cinematography.
Winner of Best Short at Buenos Aires International Independent
Film Festival and First Mention at the Milan Film Festival.
Hybrid
Monteith McCollum, 2001, 52 min., doc.
Iowa
Monteith
McCollum combines interviews, retro television spots, time lapse
photography, and dry wit to create a quirky, yet meditative portrait
of 100-year-old Milford Beeghly and his obsession with hybrid
seed corn. Directed by Beeghly's grandson, this intimate film contemplates the peculiar philosopher of the soil. Winner
of the Truer than Fiction Independent Spirit Award, Grand Jury
Award for Best Feature at Slamdance, Best Documentary at South
by Southwest, and Grand Jury Winner for Best Film at the Ann Arbor
Film Festival, among many others. www.der.org
Saturday,
July 24, 2004
BETWEEN PROGRAMS
Billy
in the Lowgrounds
Alan Lomax, 1966/1997, 60 min., doc.
Newport, Kentucky
These
historic blue grass performances will be screened during intermission
and before and after the regular festival line-up. At the 1966 Newport Folk Festival, folklorist Alan Lomax took
some of the old time musicians aside and filmed historic footage
of them making music in an informal atmosphere. This footage is
made available in this video for the first time. You will see
such legendary artists as Clark Kessinger, Jimmy Driftwood, Kilby
Snow, The Coon Creek Girls, Ison J. Fontenot, Al and Virginia
Mann, Tex Logan, and Grant Rogers performing some of their most
stirring numbers.
The
Alan Lomax Archives represent an exceptional assemblage of
audio and videotape, 16-mm film, photos, published recordings,
and assorted papers documenting folk music, dance and ritual from
around the world. The Archives were created over the course of
60 years, and symbolize the lifelong determination of Lomax to
recognize the artistic achievements of worldwide local cultures.
www.alan-lomax.com
Anthology
Film Archives will be screening films
from the Alan Lomax Collectionthis August, with additional films
from Appalshop (see below).
Saturday,
July 24, 2004
8:15-10:15
PM
Jim
From Divernon
Chad Schneider, 1998, 4 min., narr.
Illinois
This
unusual narrative takes a ride with a strange man and his "friend"
as they pass through rural Illinois. Drifting along, the
film becomes uncomfortably funny as we realize Jim may not be
all there, and neither is his friend. The concept for the film
came to director Chad Schneider during a melancholy moment at
an Italian fast food place in St. Louis, where he composed the
rough draft on a paper napkin. A native of St. Paul, Chad
is currently an MFA student at Columbia.
Lubbock
or Leave It
WORLD PREMIERE
Lizzy McGlynn, 2004, 4.5 min., doc.
Lubbock, Texas
There
are few places more remote in the U.S. than the middle of the
Texas panhandle. Yet from the isolation is born a city of
200,000 that considers itself the hub of the region, with neighbors
such as Plainview, Brownfield, Idalou, and Floydada. This
film is both a love letter and gentle mockery of Lubbock—a
city of cotton and cattle, where Jesus and political conservatism define the modus operandi. www.lizzymcglynn.com
The
Visitor
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Gene Hamilton, 2003, 6.5 min., narr.
Minburn, Iowa
You
might have flashbacks of half-awake middle-of-the-night TV watching
when you see The Visitor, a short film written by and featuring
Des Moines resident, Gene Hamilton. A farmer's life is changed
forever when he discovers that an alien with a screwdriver and
a golden crown has landed in his field.
Azure Ray's New Resolution
Sam Jones, 2003, 3.5 min., music video
Orenda
Fink and Maria Taylor are Azure Ray. The ladies' third full-length
album, Hold on Love, lets out an eloquent, reverberating,
satisfying breath. Still intimate enough you can hear lips
pulling apart and piano hammers striking, Hold on Love travels the aurally deeper road with layer upon layer of all-encompassing
sound. True southerners at heart, Azure Ray's music can't help
but sway and smolder like neo-American gothic balladry.
Director Sam Jones is a still photographer and documentarian whose
credits include I am Trying to Break Your Heart the critically
acclaimed film about the rock band Wilco. www.saddle-creek.com
4-Cylinder
400
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Garret
Savage, John Finn and Harlo Bray, 2004, 24 min., doc.
Bovina Center,
New York
In
our modern-day litigious society, who would have thought to hack
a hole through their family barn and race cars through it? Well,
the LaFever family did. Now the Annual Barnyard Car Race
has become a town tradition, drawing an audience of hundreds on
one Saturday every August. The rules of the race are simple:
no car can cost more than $300, each car must have a 4-cylinder
engine, and hitting another car's driver's-side door is strictly
prohibited. But the townspeople have come to see more than
just an offbeat race - they're eager to witness the moment when
one of the 25 competitors finally dethrones Jonathan LaFever,
the race's four-time undefeated champion. This year, the wait
may well be over, as the competition is more fierce than ever.
www.4cylinder400.com
A
Season on the Move
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Cindy Stillwell, 2003, 13 min., exp./doc.
Bozeman, Montana
A
meditation on two agricultural traditions and the seasons in which
they occur, A Season on the Move gives us an up close look
at wheat cutting and sheep shearing in the North Central United
States. Juxtaposing beautiful color and rich black and white
photography, and alternating the sounds of combines, weather forecasts,
shearing combs, and sheep voices, the film creates a portrait
of these distinct agricultural lifestyles. The cycle of seasons
takes us from the wheat harvest of late summer to the shearing
season in early spring. Filmmaker Cindy Stillwell teaches at Montana
State in Bozeman, where she has also been producing and shooting
local TV ads. Sound designer Jeff Arnsten is a Bozeman musician
who has done work for NPR, films, and commercials.
Hazel
Dickens: It's Hard to Tell the Singer from the Song
Mimi Pickering, 2001, 56.5 min., doc.
Whitesburg, Kentucky
From
the coalfields of West Virginia to the factories of Baltimore,
Hazel Dickens has lived the songs she sings. A pioneering
woman in bluegrass and hardcore country music, Hazel has influenced
generations of songwriters and musicians. Her songs of hard work,
hard times, and hardy souls have bolstered working people at picket
lines and union rallies throughout the land. Her powerful, piercing
vocals power the soundtracks for Harlan County USA and
Matewan. The Washington Post called her "a
living legend of American music, a national treasure" and
in 2001, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded her with
a National Heritage Fellowship. In this intimate portrait
directed by Mimi Pickering, interviews with Hazel and fellow musicians
such as Alison Krauss, Naomi Judd, and Dudley Connell are interwoven
with archival footage, recent performances with such artists as
Billy Bragg, and includes 16 powerful songs.
Appalshop
is a multi-disciplinary arts and education center producing original
films, video, theater, music and spoken-word recordings, radio,
photography, multimedia, and books in the heart of Appalachia.
Appalshop's education and training programs support communities'
efforts to solve their own problems in a just and equitable way.
Appalshop began in 1969 as a federal War on Poverty program to
train disadvantaged Appalachian young people for jobs in the urban
film and television industries. Rather than leave their rural
homeland, the trainees incorporated as a not-for-profit dedicated
to creating opportunities for regional self-expression. www.appalshop.org
Anthology
Film Archives will be screening films
from Appalshop and Alan Lomax Collection this August.
Sunday,
July 25, 2004
6:00-8:00
PM
Green in Gray
Jason
Ferris, 2003, 4.5 min., doc.
New York, New York
In
order to find balance in New York City, the most urban of environments,
community gardeners create small rural oases in the very center
of the city. Two community gardeners talk about their need
for nature, even as they choose to reside within a concrete jungle.
Director Jason Ferris grew up on a farm in Mississippi, and currently
works for the PBS series Wide Angle in NYC. He will be attending
Union Theological Seminary in the fall, and is working on films
about hunting in Mississippi and progressive religion and politics.
In
These Hills
Chris Bennet, 2002, 9 min., exp.
Bloomington, IN
In
These Hills was created in conjunction with a photography
project while Portland filmmaker Chris Bennett was living in Bloomington.
The black-and-white super 8 documents the limestone quarries and
surrounding farmland which now lay dormant throughout southern
Indiana, serving as a ghostly reminder of the once thriving industry.
Music by Indiana band, Early Day Miners.
www.wanderlustfilm.com
This
is Our Slaughterhouse
Matthew Boerman, 2003, 23 min., doc.
Fredericktown, Ohio
For
the ten workers of Broerman Poultry Processing, every weekend
of the past 12 years has been spent slaughtering chickens. This
short documentary reveals the surprisingly close relationships
among these workers, despite
the gruesome nature of their job. Shot with a single digital camera
over the course of eight weeks, the colorful interviews and graphic
supporting footage give new perspectives on family values, hard
work,
and what happens inside a slaughterhouse.
I’ve
never made a film before. I’m a designer who grew up on
a small farm in central Ohio. My family owned a poultry slaughterhouse
in which I worked for 11 years, starting at age ten. It was my
job to cut the feet off the chicken and turkeys. It took a friend
to convince me that not everyone grew up working in a slaughterhouse.
I realized the slaughterhouse I had worked in all those years
was bizarrely entertaining enough that it might make an interesting
documentary. - Matthew
Broerman
Dark
Highways trailer
NEW YORK PREMIERE
Christopher Jacobs, 2003, 3 min., narr.
Grand Forks, North Dakota
A North Dakota neo-noir thriller!!! Director Christopher
Jacobs teaches film at the University of North Dakota. He
has worked as a movie theater manager and projectionist, is the
movies editor for High Plains Reader, and was on the building
committee for the restoration of the local Empire Theatre.
www.und.nodak.edu
Exquisite
Corpse
David Fishel, 2004, 13 min., exp./narr.
Iowa City,
Iowa

This series of Kafka-esque scenes fits its name like a six-fingered
glove. Fifteen writers were given the surreal task of completing
a screenplay unaware of what their fellow authors were scribbling.
Once scripted and directed, the scenes were compiled on a DVD
and programmed to play in random order so you never know how auto
mechanic Del Berham's life will unfold. Includes music by William
Elliott Whitmore and Ten Grand, Winner of Student Freestyle
Award at 2004 Cedar Rapids Independent Film Festival. www.nocinfishel.com
The
Neilston Show
U.S. PREMIERE
Paul Tucker,
2003, 24 min., doc.
Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Father
and son, Willie and Tom Thomson, breed long-haired cattle at Woodneuk
Farm in the Renfrewshire hills that overlook Glasgow. They always
show cattle at their local Neilston Show, one of Scotland's best-loved
rural traditions. Jean Wardrop has been winning trophies in the
baking section of the Neilston Show since 1967. This year
she lets the cameras into her kitchen to show them how she makes
that unbeatable fatless sponge. Finally, we follow the Scott
family as they prepare vegetable animals for the children's section
in the craft tent. A feel-good documentary, which brings
out the value of team work, long-haired highland cows, and a woodpecker
made from a turnip.
Life
is Lifey WORLD
PREMIERE
Emily Evans Sloan, 2004, 4.5 min., exp.
Springfield, Missouri
Emily
Evans Sloan sends a postcard to her late sister in this experimental
film. The viewer observes old home movies of children at play,
while listening to M. Ward’s “Undertaker”. Less
morbid than it sounds, the films is Sloan’s attempt to recall
life with her sister. Using found footage, she assembled the film
in a changing bag.
World Feels Dusty NEW
YORK PREMIERE
Melanie West, 2003, 3 min., exp.
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Inspired
by Emily Dickinson’s poem, World Feels Dusty, the film explores
a woman's creativity, the power of water in the high desert and
the search for personal release. Vocalist Eleanor Ranney sings
the words of Dickinson’s poem as the crisp black and white
photography meditates on the young actress and landscape. Three
segments from director Melanie West’s film Eight Movements
were featured in last year’s festival. www.swervepictures.com
The Chair Project NEW
YORK PREMIERE
Elaine Beck, 2002, 22 min., doc.
Oskaloosa, IA
Less
of a documentary and more of a chronicle, The Chair Project interweaves
director Elaine Beck’s personal video journal with television
news coverage reporting the controversy surrounding her interactive
art installation in Oskaloosa, IA. From 2001 to 2002—rain,
sleet or snow—Beck would arrange and photograph upholstered
chairs in the front yard of her otherwise respectable turn-of-the-century
home. The exhibition soon prompted vandalism, theft and a lawsuit
filed by the city against the furniture sculptor. In this document,
Beck examines questions of art, taste and the division between
public and private space. www.elainebeck.com
Focused:
Shane McConkey
Steve Winter, Murray Wais, Scott Gaffney, 2002, 10 min., doc.
Crested Butte, Colorado
Skiing
off cliffs with waterskis and a parachute, BASE jumping off bridges,
buildings, and mountaintops, or skydiving out of airplanes, one
thing's for sure, Shane McConkey is one of the raddest, most versatile,
wackiest, and most extreme skiers in the industry. Produced by
innovative action sports outfit Matchstick Productions, Focused
will dizzy even the most ÒextremeÓ viewer. www.mspfilms.com
Sunday,
July 25, 2004
BETWEEN PROGRAMS:
Been
(T)here
Crit Street, 2003, 12 min., exp.
Cedar Falls, Iowa
The
unrelenting sameness of place is explored in this experimental
road trip. On this journey it is also the parallax and the
rude unsteadiness that reminds us that although the rural landscape
appears to pass us in hasty patterns, this speed is not the changing
position of things but rather a change in the position of the
person looking. Been (T)here has been screened as
an ongoing gallery installation at the UNI Gallery of Art.
Small
Town
E.A. McKeever, 1990, 8 min., exp.
Columbia, Missouri
This
montage of photos taken in small towns across Missouri and Iowa
features feel good music by John Cougar Mellencamp. McKeever
was awarded a free case of Mountain Dew upon completion
of his film.
Sunday,
July 25, 2004
8:15-10:15
PM
Joe and the Elusive
Weedfish NEW
YORK PREMIERE
Brandon Baker, 2002, 8 min., narr.
Tallahassee, Florida
Tired
of his monotonous office-job life, Joe sticks it to his boss and
heads for the great outdoors. In a bait shop, he stumbles across
a news clipping about a mythic, slippery fish evading capture
in ponds across Florida. Joe sees the opportunity to earn the
respect he’s been denied for so long and sets out with his
friend (a cameraman for the Outdoors Channel) to catch it.
Elegy: The Life and Work of Breece D’J Pancake NEW
YORK PREMIERE
Jason Freeman, 2003, 10 min., doc.
Milton, West Virginia
This
aptly titled documentary remembers West Virginia short story author
Breece D’J Pancake, who committed suicide in 1979. Though
he cut his life short at the age of 26, Pancake is credited with
reviving an interest in contemporary regional literature and was
nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 1983. His work has been compared
to William Faulkner, James Joyce and Flannery O'Connor for the
strong sense of place found in his characters. It is this relationship,
between place and identity, that director Jason Freeman explores
in this elegy.
Azure Ray's We are Mice
Nik Fackler, 2004,
4 min., music video
Omaha, Nebraska
Director,
Nik Fackler, has created a period piece for the second Azure Ray
video being shown in this year's festival. His idea for
using shadow puppets came from seeing 4th graders making
them for a fun day project. Fackler wrote, directed,
and edited two short films before graduating from Millard
West High School in Omaha, NE in 2002.
Since then he has continued making shorts, begun directing music
videos, and has a feature-length screenplay in development. www.nikfackler.com
Louder
than Bombs
Przemyslaw Wojcieszek, 2001, 92 min., narr.
Poland
A
rebellious streak defines Marcin (Rafal Mackowiak), a 21-year-old
living in a small Polish town. His world revolves around his longtime
girlfriend, his mechanic job in his father's garage, and his idolization
of James Dean and The Smiths. Marcin is faced with difficult
life choices when his father dies and a slew of relatives converge
on the small Polish hamlet for the funeral. As Marcin deals with
their narrow minds and critical commentary, he also must act to
stay with his girlfriend (Sylwia Juszczak), who reveals her plan
to leave Poland for a life in the United States. This award-winning
Polish feature asks the question, Does one have to leave the small
town for the big city to be a success?
2004
HONORABLE MENTION:
Broken
Limbs: Apples, Agriculture and the New American Farmer
Jamie Howell and Guy Evans, 2004, 57 min., doc.
Washington
This
eco-doc looks at the plight of apple growers in Washington state
in the age of globalization and points the way to sustainable
U.S. agriculture for the little guy. www.bullfrogfilms.com
Coal
Bucket Outlaw
Tom Hansel, 2001, 26.5 min., doc.
Kentucky
Built
around a day in the life of a Kentucky coal truck driver, this
film looks at the people who haul the fuel that powers over 50%
of the electricity in this country. www.appalshop.com
The
Maya of Toledo – Ancient Culture, Modern Lives
Robert Flanagan, 2003, 38 min., doc.
Belize
The
Kekchi and Mopan Maya of Southern Belize live in small villages
without electricity or running water. Growing their own
food, hunting and gathering from the jungle, they retain a purity
and balance that the industrialized world has lost. Produced by
Ajax Films, NYC.
Wilderness
and Spirit, A Mountain Called Katahdin
Huey, 2002, 100 min., doc.
Maine
The
spirit of Katahdin and the people who have been drawn to Maine's
Great Mountain is captured in this lush documentary. Director
Huey eplores ways of thinking about the wilderness and how people,
past to the present, have found spiritual solace and strength
in this mountain called Katahdin. www.filmsbyhuey.com
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