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Latest posts from National Screen Institute - Canada (NSI) |
NSI grads win Golden Sheaf Awards at Yorkton Film Festival Posted: 28 May 2018 11:36 AM PDT Yorkton Film Festival took place over the weekend and lots of NSI grads won Golden Sheaf awards: Special AwardsFounder’s Award Run As One – The Journey of the Front Runners from director/producer Erica Daniels (CBC New Indigenous Voices)Kathleen Shannon Award Birth of a Family (pictured) from from writer/director Tasha Hubbard (NSI IndigiDocs, Featuring Aboriginal Stories Program)Main Entry CategoriesComedy Must Kill Karl from director/producer Joe Kicak (NSI Drama Prize) and producers Karen Moore and Ryan West (both NSI Features First)Digital Media It Was Me from producer Christine Kleckner (NSI Drama Prize)Documentary History & Biography Run As One – The Journey of the Front Runners from director/producer Erica DanielsDrama The Undertaker’s Son from directors/producers The Affolter Brothers (TELUS STORYHIVE animated shorts)Short Subject (non-fiction) The Apprenticeship of Raffael Cocco from director Erin Cumming (TELUS STORYHIVE digital shorts)The post NSI grads win Golden Sheaf Awards at Yorkton Film Festival appeared first on National Screen Institute - Canada (NSI). |
Posted: 24 May 2018 02:40 PM PDT Beth is 31 and, since yesterday, single. She lives alone with an old cat found in her alleyway and barely makes a living working at her sister’s café. Beth is also a robot. Beth is in a strange place, really … Creative teamWriters: Kevin T. Landry, Catherine Roy Filmmaker’s statementRobeth is an absurd love story between two robots, one of which is going through quite the identity crisis, and it’s probably the most arduous experience I have ever been through as a director. Everything that could go bad during shooting went bad including, but not restricted to, drunk extras, van problems, noisy neighbours drilling through the wall, combusting equipment and dinner, etc. Even so, thanks to our amazing cast and crew, and with the help of everyone at the Kino’00 offices, I am really proud of the final product we managed to pull out of this car wreck of a shoot. About Kevin T. LandryWith a bachelor’s degree in communications from L’Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) (concentration: cinema), Kevin began specializing in post-production before venturing into production and screenwriting, thanks to the Kino film organization. He is interested in the imaginary, the absurd and the fine line that separate the worlds of reality and fantasy. The post Robeth appeared first on National Screen Institute - Canada (NSI). |
Posted: 24 May 2018 02:37 PM PDT Ingrid and her best friend Conrad experience a lifetime of memories together when they imagine what it would be like to travel through a black hole. Creative teamWriter/director: Leah Johnston Filmmaker’s statementIngrid and the Black Hole is a short film about time travel as a metaphor for Alzheimer’s disease. In the story, Ingrid and her best friend, Conrad ‘travel through time,’ glimpsing various memories of their lives as they grow old together. In the end, we eventually come to learn that Ingrid is in fact an old woman with Alzheimer’s now talking to her son who she has mistaken for Conrad. She is already ‘in the black hole’ metaphorically speaking, as her confused perception of time and identity is allowing her to time-travel in her mind. The concept, while seemingly dark, takes a hopeful spin on the subject of Alzheimer’s. As her son observes near the end of the film, “wherever Ingrid is in her mind, she’s happy” – highlighting a little acknowledged reality of the disease that, while it is painful for the family members to watch, Alzheimer’s is in many ways a blind descent into darkness for those suffering with it. The concept of this short has been brewing in my mind for around five years, but it was only when I took on a job as a part-time caregiver to my own ailing grandmother who has Alzheimer’s that the story began to really take shape for me. Suddenly, I wasn’t writing about some hypothetical character, I was writing about my own family and their experiences. About Leah JohnstonLeah Johnston is an award-winning Nova Scotian filmmaker whose short films that have played at over 40 festivals worldwide and been broadcast on Air Canada flights and CBC television. She is the recipient of the NSI Online Short Film Festival Corus Fearless Female Filmmaker award and the $35K Bravofact/WIFT Pitch Prize. Her most recent short, Ingrid and the Black Hole, played at Cannes Not Short on Talent and Fantasia, taking home numerous prizes for best short, including a sweep of the awards at Vancouver Island Film Festival (Best Picture, Best Editing, Best Screenplay, Best Technical Achievement). Leah was recently selected by the Academy of Canadian Cinema as one of six directors across Canada to participate in the inaugural Female Directing Mentorship program. She is a graduate of New York University, the National Screen Institute and Reykjavik Talent Lab and is represented for directing by Greenlight Management. The post Ingrid and the Black Hole appeared first on National Screen Institute - Canada (NSI). |
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