SIFF Brings Humpday Home for the Festival
SIFF is making a big deal out of snagging local director Lynn Shelton's Humpday for its Northwest Connections program; it'll be the SIFF Centerpiece Gala on Friday, June 5, and hopefully help raise money to help SIFF pay for their office relocation to the Seattle Center's Alki Room. We saw--and liked-- the "mumblecore bromance" Humpday at Sundance. We'll assume you know the HumpFest backstory. The "local" emphasis of the Northwest Connections program makes for a grab-bag experience: Sundance hit The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle will rub elbows with the filmed-in-Wallingford World's Greatest Dad, starring Robin Williams, and Sandy Cioffi's documentary, Sweet Crude.
Full Northwest Connections program cut and pasted for your perusal after the jump.
SIFF 2009 Northwest Connections Features
Back to the Garden, Flower Power Comes Full Circle, directed by Kevin Tomlinson (USA, 2009) WORLD PREMIERE
Twenty years ago, local filmmaker Kevin Tomlinson interviewed hippies at a "healing gathering" in Eastern Washington. Now he tracks the same folks to see what became of their environmental utopias. Today, in the midst of global warming, the voices of these flower children are prophetic.
Dancing Across Borders, directed by Anne H. Bass (USA, 2008) WORLD PREMIERE
Sokvannara "Sy" Sar was a dancer on the streets of Cambodia until he caught the eye of filmmaker Anne Bass, who helped him become a professional ballet dancer. In her debut feature film, Bass sympathetically chronicles Sy's ascent as ballet's newest rising star.
Finding Bliss, directed by Julie Davis (USA, 2008)
Jody needs a place to shoot her movies but all she can find is a porn studio. She starts to secretly film there but is discovered and forced to collaborate with an adult film director. Filmed in Spokane, this fun romantic comedy borrows plot lines from director Julie Davis' own start in the industry.
Icons Among Us, directed by Michael Rivoira, Lars Larson, Peter J. Vogt (USA, 2009)
Executive producer John Comerford interviewed 75 jazz artists with high-definition cameras, shot 25 hours of concerts on Super-16mm film, and blended them with archival footage. The result is a dynamic and engaging document of many of the greatest jazz musicians of today. Also part of SIFF Face the Music.
The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle, directed by David Russo (USA, 2009)
A group of janitorial slackers unwittingly becomes the subject of a very bizarre biochemical engineering experiment involving cookies that may help illuminate the meaning of existence. Full of imaginative animation sequences, this visually inventive comedy from Seattle's David Russo is really a spiritual quest in sheep's clothing.
Independent America: Rising From Ruins, directed by Hanson Hosein (Canada, 2008)
Independent America: Rising From Ruins explores the effects of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans and how the Moms and Pop businesses provided hope where corporate America disappointed. Avoiding over-dramatization, Hanson Hosein educates audiences about the empowered and hopeful in the New Orleans community.
It Takes a Cult, directed by Eric Johannsen (USA, 2008)
The Israel Family (aka, The Love Family) was a communal religious movement born in Seattle that grew to a tribe of nearly 300 men, women, and children. Raised in the Israel Family, Johannsen brings an intimate portrait of communal life and what drew them all together.
Pirate for the Sea,directed by Ronald Colby (USA, 2008)
Hero to conservationists and villain to hunters, marine environmentalist Paul Watson commits himself 100 percent to his cause. In this stirring profile, director and narrator Ron Colby explores Watson's beliefs, blunders, and triumphs. He makes a convincing case that the world's endangered oceans are better off due to Watson's dedicated and frequently controversial efforts.
The Spy and the Sparrow, directed by Garrett Bennett (USA, 2009) WORLD PREMIERE
Shot in Seattle and produced by local shingle Eke Pictures, Bennett merges spy thriller with domestic drama to sly and surprising effect as retired agent Thomas Sparrow faces his greatest challenges in trying to reconnect with his troubled daughter, Josephine, in this sly and surprising film.
Sweet Crude, directed by Sandy Cioffi (USA, 2008)
Ten percent of our oil supply comes from Nigeria, but few of us know the social and environmental devastation that the oil business wreaks there. Local filmmaker Sandy Cioffi brings her camera overseas to expose the corruption and the growing militant reaction to the politically irresponsible oil companies in the Niger Delta.
Trimpin: The Sound of Invention, directed by Peter Esmonde (USA, 2009)
Trimpin is a wild ride through the kinetic universe of a creative genius. We watch Seattle-based artist/inventor/engineer/composer Trimpin design, scavenge, build, and investigate an outrageous range of materials. This will delight anyone interested in the mysteries, pitfalls, and sheer joy of creative experiment. Also part of SIFF Face the Music program. Also part of SIFF Face the Music.
True Adolescents, directed by Craig Johnson (USA, 2009)
Washington native Craig Johnson fills his directorial debut with the sights and sounds of the Pacific Northwest in this humorous and insightful tale of a down-on-his-luck indie rocker (Mark Duplass from Humpday and The Puffy Chair) who confronts his biggest doubts and fears when a camping trip goes awry.
The Whole Truth, directed by Colleen Patrick (USA, 2009) WORLD PREMIERE
A greedy, high living acting coach transforms disgusting criminals to appeal to juries, until she overhears a client she helped set free plan a heinous crime - and becomes his target for murder. Escaping death and discovering who she really is becomes the most expensive - and rewarding - experience of her life.
World's Greatest Dad, directed by Bobcat Goldthwait (USA, 2009)
Shot on location in Seattle, this wickedly funny dark comedy stars Robin Williams as a sad-sack poetry teacher who inadvertently finds his greatest opportunity from a freak accident. Bobcat Goldthwait has concocted a lusciously perverse and refreshingly original tale that tackles love, loss, and our curious quest for infamy.
ZMD: Zombies of Mass Destruction, directed by Kevin Hamedani (USA, 2009)
Things are rotten in the idyllic island town of Port Gamble, Washington, quite possibly because there's been a zombie virus outbreak. Now a small band of intrepid heroes must fight back and eradicate the undead invaders - it's the American way.
SIFF 2009 Northwest Connections Shorts
"Bedtime Story," directed by Sarah Jane Lapp (USA, 2009)
"CC 2010," directed by Travis Senger (USA, 2009)
"Endless Tunnel," directed by Tommy Thompson (USA, 2008)
"The Chronicles of Cleo and Jack," directed by Karn Junkinsmith (USA, 2009)
"The Day My Parents Became Cool," directed by Steve Edmiston (USA, 2008)
"Dark Material," directed by Maile Martinez (USA, 2009)
"Her Meds," directed by Matt Cibelli (USA, 2008)
"It's In The P-I," directed by Bradley Hutchinson (USA, 2009)
"November," directed by Benjamin Dobyns (USA, 2008)
"One Night," directed by Laura Jean Cronin (USA, 2009)
"Somewhere," directed by Salise Hughes (USA, 2009)
"Sophia + Anna," directed by Joy Andrews (USA, 2009)
"Thicker Than Water," directed by Sami Kubo (USA, 2008)


