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COOPER HEWITT LAB | REELABILITIES FILM SCREENING: GETTING UP


2/6/18 @ 6 pm
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian National Design Museum, 2 East 91 at 5th Avenue

Join us for a free film screening of Getting Up, tells the story of graffiti artist TemptOne, who was diagnosed with Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The screening will be followed by a conversation with Luke DuBois, Co-Director and Associate Professor of Integrated Digital Media, NYU Media Lab, and Pamela Horn, Acting Director, Digital and Emerging Media and Director, Cross-Platform Publishing and Strategic Partnerships, Cooper Hewitt, on future technologies and how they will help us to reimagine user-centered accessible design. Free tickets available with registration:

https://goo.gl/2zYb1J

Women Filmmakers: Immigrant Stories Series 2018

Deadline: 2/16/18

For the fourth year, New York Women in Film & Television will present Women Filmmakers: Immigrant Stories, a screening series featuring films about the New York immigrant experience by women directors and/or producers!

No submission fee is required for applications.

Each filmmaker will be paid a rental fee and a small honorarium for their participation in the screenings.

Submit: https://goo.gl/gohDB7

NYU Student Feedback Project – FUSION

Fusion TV

Deadline: 2/7/2018

The FUSION Creative Board is led by Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. with founding members Viola Davis, Ezra Edelman, Jodie Foster, Meryl Streep, and Residente. The FUSION development team reviews all submissions.

We are looking for talented NYU students to give our projects a second set of eyes and an additional layer of feedback. FUSION will host a weekly 1-hour session for students to review pitches, fill out coverage reports, ask questions, and discuss concept coverage techniques. It’s a great insight into the tv development process.

This opportunity is open to undergraduate juniors, seniors, and grad students from all majors/schools. Students must be legally authorized to work in the United States. Students will need to commit 1-2 hours a week through mid-April and will be paid $15 an hour.

Submission URL: fusion.tv/nyustudentfeedback

Different Faces Different Voices Film Festival

The International Different Faces Different Voices Film Festival in historic Cambridge, Massachusetts has expanded for ’18 and is open for film submissions in five categories! Filmmakers may submit an original Flicks4Chicks contest short that must be made between now and April 20th. Or they may opt to submit an already completed film under one of the Casting A Light categories. There will be two top cash prizes for the Diversity and Beyond the Bechdel Test winners, plus many other cash and gift awards. The festival runs from June 27th – 29th.

All students receive 20% off submission.

Specific guidelines for Flicks4Chicks film:
– must feature a woman as one of the central characters (men can be featured too!)
– must have at least one woman in a creative leadership role – producer; writer; director; main actor; editor
– must be based on one of the 100 loglines the festival team has created – we send them once you sign up (submit application) and YOU choose
– films must be 10 minutes or under in length
– films must be in English or captioned.

For details and to sign up: https://filmfreeway.com/DifferentFacesDifferentVoicesFilmFestival.

Flaherty NYC: For Life, Against the War


1/30/18 @ 7 pm – 10 pm
Anthology Film Archives

Shown in its world premiere on January 30, 1967, For Life Against the War was an open-call, collective statement from American independent filmmakers disparate in style and sensibility but united by their opposition to the Vietnam War. Part of the protest festival The Week of the Angry Arts, the epic compilation film incorporated one to three minute-long segments which were sent from many corners of the country, spliced together and projected.

https://goo.gl/pP9V2H

A screening & discussion with John Canemaker & Jon Gartenberg

1/25 @ 2 PM – 4 PM
NYU Tisch School of the Arts, 721 Broadway, Room 006

The NYU Aging Incubator presents a screening and Q&A with Tisch Professor, John Canemaker, celebrated animator and Academy Award winner, and Jon Gartenberg, renowned film curator and NYU Tisch Alum. Join us for a look at John’s animated short film, The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation, and a conversation that explores John’s personal perspective on aging.

RSVP: https://goo.gl/DB2Yb5

Polaris Presents ‘Save My Seoul’ Screening and Panel Discussion

1/18/17 @ 7PM
Regal E-Walk 13 Theater

Polaris, a DC based nonprofit, is putting on a screening and panel discussion centering on the documentary ‘Save My Seoul’ which sheds light onto the global sex industry through interviews with traffickers, civilians, police, and survivors. Please join us to discuss the local context of modern slavery in Washington D.C. with experts from the human trafficking field. The event will take place at the Regal E-Walk 13 Theater. Tickets are $5 and include popcorn & a soft drink. Tickets can be purchased and more information can be found here: https://act.polarisproject.org/page/17581/event/1

Opening Night Flaherty NYC: “I do no remember”

1/16/2018 @ 7PM
Anthology Film Archives, 32 2nd Ave, New York

In the opening program, images disintegrate, separate from the sound, multiply, and stutter, connecting with each other and cracking up visual grammar like an egg. Colectivo los Ingrávidos is a collective from Mexico that explores media representations of violence, reinventing images as an open space of possibility and dialogue. belit sağ is a videomaker from Turkey who re-contextualizes images, putting them on the same level as each other and deconstructing their hierarchical references. The interaction between the images dissociates their communal narrative practices, opening up the possibility of new critical approaches.

Tickets $11 GA, $9 students/seniors.

http://flahertyseminar.org/i-do-not-remember/

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