Volume 4, No. 22
November 5, 2004
Search  
Home Accolades What's the Buzz Art and About The Reel Deal Book Marks On the Safe Side SCAD Sports Classifieds Archives Calendar
 
 
Photo by Wayne C. Moore
Movie fans wait in line at Trustees Theater Oct. 30 to see “Finding Neverland,” the closing film of the 2004 Savannah Film Festival.
Films garner awards in festival competition

By Rebecca Greenspan

The Savannah Film Festival presented the 2004 awards for student and professional competition films Oct. 30 at 7 p.m. at Trustees Theater. The awards ceremony capped off the eight-day festival, which screened more than 60 films.

Savannah Film Festival award-winners

• Best Narrative Feature: “Dandelion”

• Best Documentary: “Entertaining Vietnam”

• Best Narrative Short: “Lift”

• Jury Award: “This is Not a Film”

• Jury Award: Standout Performance: Nadia Dajani in “This is Not a Film”

• Best Director: Mark Milgard for “Dandelion”

• 2004 Savannah Film Festival HBO Films Producer Award: “Make ’Em Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers’ Story”

• 2004 Savannah Film Festival HBO Films Best Student Film: “American Made”

• Best Student Film Runner-up: “Loopy”

• Best SCAD Student Film: “Divya”

• Best Student Film (Animation): “Rex Steele: Nazi Smasher”

• Best Student Film (Animation) Runner-up: “Divya”

The films were juried by a distinguished panel of five judges: Bill Dawes, an actor whose credits in New York theater premieres include Lord Alfred Douglas in “Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde” and whose film credits include about a dozen independent films; Abe Gurko, playwright, actor and creator of ABE-NYC Events, an event-planning venture; Sophia Karteris, vice president of programming for Turner South, Turner Broadcasting System Inc.’s regional entertainment network; Michael Mailer, president of Bigel/Mailer Films, a New York-based development and production company specializing in star-driven films that bridge the gap between Hollywood and independents; and Nancy Spears, director of marketing for Warner Home Video, the world’s largest distributor of video entertainment.

Kicking off the festival on Oct. 23 was a special screening of “Sideways,” starring Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Virginia Madsen and Sandra Oh. Other films shown at the 2004 festival included “Kinsey,” starring Liam Neeson; “Being Julia,” starring Annette Bening and Shaun Evans; “Finding Neverland,” starring Johnny Depp and Kate Winslet; and “Stage Beauty,” starring Claire Danes and Billy Crudup.

Some of this year’s highlights included visits from internationally renowned special guests, including actor Peter O’Toole, who was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award; actress Kathleen Turner, who also received a Lifetime Achievement Award; movie critic Roger Ebert, who was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award in Entertainment Journalism; and director Norman Jewison, who received the Achievement in Cinema Award.

Other special guests at the festival included Evans; Jason Patric, who screened his 1990 film “After Dark, My Sweet”; Illeana Douglas, who screened her original short “Supermarket”; David Gordon Green, director of “Undertow”; Ray McKinnon and Walton Goggins, director and producer, respectively, of “Chrystal”; Jonathon Estrin, executive director of the American Film Institute; Tom Ortenberg, president of Lions Gate Entertain­ment; as well as other industry professionals and student and independent filmmakers.

The festival also hosted a series of panels and workshops with leaders and rising stars in today’s film industry. Topics included “The Business of the Biz: Financing Your Dream,” “Short and Feature Documentary Films,” “The Written Word,” “Careers in the Camera Department,” “The Making of $50 Million Feature,” “Careers in Postproduction,” “Careers in Casting and Acting,” and “The Handling of Hollywood: A Symposium of Agents, Managers, Publicists and Casting Directors.”

In addition, Ebert conducted three workshops on the Orson Welles classic “Citizen Kane.” Ebert critiqued the nuances of the film, arguably one of the greatest movies ever made. Through frame-by-frame analysis, Ebert discussed the techniques and tricks Welles used to create his masterpiece.

More than 32,000 people attended the festival. Special screenings and student and professional competition film screenings were held at Trustees Theater and the Lucas Theatre. The 2005 Savannah Film Festival will take place Oct. 29 - Nov. 5.

Greenspan is media relations manager at SCAD.



Films garner awards in festival competition


Founders’ Day celebration incorporates new traditions



  Accolades
  Advancing the Cause
  Around Town
  ARTicle
  Contact Us
  Enter Net
  Extras
  In Your Corner
  Master Works
  New book explores the history of SCAD buildings
  On Display
  Outstanding alumna teaches skills learned at SCAD
  Outstanding alumnus cofounds award-winning architecture firm
  Personal Space
  SCAD Job Listings
  Sound Board
  Trivial Pursuits




SCAD Radio

District

Job Magnet

The Hive

MySCAD