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Involuntary Activist
The Roxy Cinema (2 6th Avenue) will be playing host to a fleet of films from Europe’s Nordic filmmakers. The Nordic International Film Festival (NIFF), running October 16 to the 20th, highlights the work of independent and up-and-coming Nordic and international filmmakers. The Festival’s goal is to create not just a celebration of Nordic films, but also a place where filmmakers can network and grow..
The festival has world, international, and New York premieres in its slate. The Opening Night feature is X & Y from director Anna Odell (The Reunion), in which an artist recruits a group of actors to live in a warehouse and explore concepts of identity and sexuality. Several films shown at NIFF are part of a collaboration with Film i Väst in the Aurora Borealis category, showcasing new talent.One of these films is Involuntary Activist from Mikael Bundsen, in which a married, openly gay teacher in Wales faces the choice of betraying his family or his core values when his older sister asks him to step back into the closet for her wedding in Turkey. In Moonfire, directed by Kasper Juhl, a brother and sister live intertwined by dark obsession and tension rises when a photographer enters their lives.
The NIFF will also have guest speakers and many of the filmmakers in attendance presenting after the films. There will also be a free panel open to the public called “How to finance independent films told from different perspectives”, moderated by Vareity.
To learn more, go to: https://www.nordicfilmfest.org/
Nordic International Film Festival
October 16 - 20, 2019
Roxy Cinema
Roxy Hotel Cellar Level
2 6th Ave
New York, NY 10013
Now in its 7th year, the Chelsea Film Festival brings an international selection of shorts, features, and documentaries to NYC. Running October 17 to the 20th at the AMC Loews 34th Street (312 west 34th street), the fest includes films from Australia, USA, UK, France, Turkey, India, Japan and South Africa.
The festival opens with the South African film Uncovered, from director Zuko Nodada in which a woman investigates the murder of her sister and how it’s tied to a corrupt mine. Other films include Chasing the Present, director Mark Waters’ documentary which follows James Sebastiano, a materially successful young man, as he engages in a perpetual battle against anxiety that takes him on a worldwide journey of self discovery from the streets of New York, to the stillness of the Ganges, and deep into the jungles of Peru. She is the Ocean is a documentary from Inna Blokhina about four women from around the world and how through surfing are tied to the ocean.
Virtual Reality is represented with a special block of VR programs in competition that go from outer space, to mountain ranges, to the music of Pink Floyd. Along with its films, the fest will also put on the Reel Magic Hour at the Manhattan Center (311 W 34th St.). Reel Magic Hour is a day long program that provides one hour panels designed for filmmakers to meet and network.
To learn more, go to: https://www.chelseafilm.org
7th Edition Chelsea Film Festival
October 17 - 20, 2019
AMC Loews 34th Street
312 W 34th St.
New York, NY 10001
Celebrating 20 years of films being screened in rural New York, the 2019 Woodstock Film Festival is a momentous occasion. Running October 2 to the 6th in Woodstock, NY, the fest features film greats, narrative features, documentaries, and shorts from new talent and longtime filmmakers. Films in competition includes the world premiere 18 To Party, from director Jeff Roda. The film, set in 1984 outside a small-town nightclub, follows a group of 8th graders grappling with a spate of recent suicides, UFO sightings, their absentee parents, and each other. Another world premiere at the fest is Parkland Rising, a documentary from two-time Emmy Award winner Cheryl Horner McDonough, Parkland Rising looks at the lives of survivors of the 2018 Parkland Florida school shooting and the movement they’re leading for gun reform.
The wide slate of shorts will include animated works, teen films, music videos, shorts by and for women, documentaries and more. Panels at the fest explore filmmaking in the Hudson Valley, trending issues, women in film, conversations with actors and directors participatng in the festival, and more.
To learn more go to: https://woodstockfilmfestival.org/
2019 Woodstock Film Festival
October 2 - 6, 2019
Box Office
13 Rock City Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
Organ
Now in its second year, the Female Filmmaker Festival (FFFEST), returns to the Quad Cinema (34 West 13th Street, NY, NY) from October 25 to the 27th. FFFEST celebrated the achievements of women filmmakers in cinema from all over the world. Along with screening gems and oddities, the fest is also a resource for women looking to learn more about the film industry.
For fans of cult horror, included in the festival is a double feature focusing on actor, playwright, and cinematographer Kei Fujiwara. First is Shinya Tsukamoto’s gritty cyberpunk body horror film, Tetsuo the Iron Man in which Fujiwara acted and shot, followed by her directorial 1996 feature Organ, based on her work in experimental theatre. Other films include The Music of Regret (with a Q&A with filmmaker Laurie Simmons and Shirin Neshat of Women Without Men), Variety, Women Without Men, and more.
Panels include How to Break in & Navigate Your First Film Deal, with panelists Desiree Akhavan, Dianna Agron, and Erin Lee Car. There is also Women in Film Programming with panelists Mahen Bonetti, founder and executive director of the New York African Film Festival; Cristina Cacioppo, programmer of Alamo Drafthouse Downtown Brooklyn; and Nellie Killian, programmer of dozens of series including “Tell Me: Women Filmmakers, Women’s Stories,” the Migrating Forms festival, and the Sarasota Film Festival.
To learn more, go to: https://fffest.org/
FFFEST
October 25 - 27, 2019
Quad Cinema
34 W. 13th St.
New York, NY 10011