
Last Saturday, after my LAVC class, I took a flight out of Burbank to spend the rest of the weekend at the Sacramento International Film Festival.
I’m not a very good traveler and even the shortest trip feels like I’ve been away for years. I’m never very comfortable on a plane; my legs don’t appreciate the cramped quarters and my ears despise the change in altitude. I don’t have a fear of flying, but the various airports seem to exploit the minimal dangers involved.
At Burbank, there is an exhibit dedicated to Amelia Earhart – an odd homage when more successful fliers could be profiled. (This is tantamount to a Charles Lindbergh exhibit in a daycare center.) The fact that Earhart’s ill-fated flight is prominently featured in the airport “terminal” has an ironic sense of foreboding while boarding an aircraft.
The Sacramento Airport is adorned with big posters featuring “The Faces of Global Terrorism,” which provide a rogues gallery of swarthy desperados and potential suicide bombers.

To make travel matters worse, I hate hotels. After seeing a 20/20 episode where some sort of ultraviolet light was used to show hotel bedspreads soaked with saliva, blood, mucus, semen, urine and fecal matter, the first thing I do in any hotel room (even at the Bellagio) is carefully remove everything from the bed that doesn’t reek of bleach. (And I won’t go anywhere without my travel size Luminol.)

Resembling a hybrid of Larry Flynt and Peter Lorre, the passionate but plegmatic Anaya champions up-and-coming writers/filmmakers in the NorCal area, providing all sorts of educational and professional opportunities to those in the cinema arts.
The festival is a not-for-profit arts organization with year round activities, culminating in the weekend event each spring. Anaya’s hands-on approach is to bridge the gap between Northern and Southern California and provide more filmmaking experiences for artists north of San Francisco. This year, the fest was home to over 80 films, and although it's relatively small and lacks the clout of Sundance or even the bacchanalia of Austin, it's only in its third year, and Anaya is determined to make it a contender – especially since its home is the state’s capital.
The festival is a not-for-profit arts organization with year round activities, culminating in the weekend event each spring. Anaya’s hands-on approach is to bridge the gap between Northern and Southern California and provide more filmmaking experiences for artists north of San Francisco. This year, the fest was home to over 80 films, and although it's relatively small and lacks the clout of Sundance or even the bacchanalia of Austin, it's only in its third year, and Anaya is determined to make it a contender – especially since its home is the state’s capital.
The 2007 big attraction was SPECIAL, a film directed by Hal Haberman and Jeremy Passmore and starring Michael Rapaport as a man whose medication leads him to believe he has super powers. The film won the Special Jury Award. The Outstanding Film Award went to THE ELEPHANT KING directed by Seth Grossman and produced by Emmanual Michael.
The festival also devotes screenings to non-fiction films discussing environmental issues via its VISIONS program. Films this year included DISCOVER HETCH HETCHY, narrated by Harrison Ford, that tells the tragic story of Yosemite Valley's “lost twin” - a magnificent valley that was dammed and flooded under 300 feet of water for use as a reservoir, and HOW CUBA SURVIVED PEAK OIL, which won the festival’s award for Best Documentary.
However, it was probably the 48 HOUR FILM FESTIVAL which drew the largest crowd. This sort of event is popping up all over festivals now. It is a competition where groups of filmmakers make a short film in two days.
Sixteen ten-minute films were entered in this competition – all of which were screened at the CREST - Sacramento’s last picture palace, an art deco theater which opened in 1948 after completely remodeling its predecessor, the Hippodrome.
The cast features Jason Bortz, Christina Marie, Brian Rife and Gary Amato. Bortz gave the best performance of all entries, which helped bolster the good production values and contribute to the win.
Other entries included HELL MARY, BLACK WIDOW and BLACKOUT, which was directed by Brandon Slazas and would have taken second place had there been a prize.
As always, I met with a group of writers to hear pitches and give feedback at the 24th Street Theater. It was a two-and-a-half hour session that included talking about concepts, story construction, marketability and the business in general.
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For more information visit: http://www.ncwfonline.org/
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