Tampilkan postingan dengan label Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 22 Juni 2009

Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 Coverage

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Pre-festival Coverage
Preview

Daily Coverage
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4

Reviews By Program
Opening Gala: Award Winners from Around the World
Official Selection 1: The Edge of Reason
Official Selection 2: Lust for Life
Official Selection 11: Tech-Neurological
Official Selection 12: 90-Minute Makeover
Celebrity Shorts
Sci Fi: OUT THERE

Reviews By Film
Acting for the Camera
After Tomorrow
Alter Ego
Black Dog's Progress, The
Bipolar: An Interview with Richard
Boris
Buddies
Captain Coulier (Space Explorer)
Civilian
Cold and Dry / Tørt og kjølig
Crap / Simonac
Cutecutecute
Eve
Everyday People
Gone Fishing
Inscape
Jerrycan
Lady Who Swallowed a Fly, The
Love You More
Made Up
Marooned?
Monday Before Thanksgiving
My Name is Dominic / Tous les enfants s'appellent Dominique
Next Floor
One of Those Days
Paul Rondin Is... Paul Rondin / Paul Rondin est... Paul Rondin
Sand / Zand
Secret Life of Beards, The
Skhizein
Sound-Shadows / Lydskygger
Sparks
Spine, The
Survivor of the Hippocampus, The / Le rescapé de l'hippocampe
Token Hunchback
Tolibu Dibu Dauchyu
Wallace and Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death
Website is Down: Sales Guy Vs Web Dude, The

Post-festival Coverage
Awards
Wrap Up

The Worldwide Short Film Festival ran from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 - Wrap Up

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The Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 has come and gone and we are now left with the memories of a lot of films! One thing I noticed this year, in particular with the Opening Night Award Winning program is a sense of 'it will be okay'. It feels like recently we have gone through a long period of a long period of dark and gritty = good, it was nice to see films where the whatever happened turned out fine. They didn't die, get attacked, fall, etc... it was just .. fine. It wasn't the case for everything of course but it's was a refreshing change of pace and I hope to see more of it!

Favourite Fiction:
Cold and Dry / Tørt og kjølig and Sand / Zand

Artistic Works of Wonder:
Next Floor and The Survivor of the Hippocampus / Le rescapé de l'hippocampe

Favourite Animated:
Skhizein

Giggle-fest:
Tolibu Dibu Dauchyu

The wacky and the bizarre:
Cutecutecute

Favourite Program:
Official Selection 11: Tech-Neurological

Most Enthusiastic Crowd:
Although Opening Night was lively, the crowd during the Day 1 screening of Official Selection 1: The Edge of Reason was enthusiastic and very full. Front row-filled out full. That's impressive.

The films that caught my heart:
Paul Rondin Is... Paul Rondin / Paul Rondin est... Paul Rondin and Monday Before Thanksgiving

Themes:
Challenging preconceptions, Embracing Weirdness

Still has me thinking:

Alter Ego, after seeing this film I had a really great discussion with my sister about it that went on for ages! It really made me think, the writing was fabulous and the the performances were spot on.

Sharing is good! Some Shorts are Available online:
Black Dog's Progress, The (3 min 15s)
Civilian (4 min 01s)
Crap / Simonac (10 min 23s)
Cutecutecute (1 minute)
The Website is Down: Sales Guy Vs. Web Dude (10 min 23s)

The Worldwide Short Film Festival ran from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Minggu, 21 Juni 2009

Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 - Awards

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The Worldwide Short Film Festival started with the Award Winner shorts screening, and now we bookend closing day with the annoucement of award winners for the festivals 15th year. For the Audience Awards, the audience rating all films from 1 to 5 after the screenings. Those ballots have been casted and counted and here are the winners of the Audience Award and Juried Awards for the 2009 Worldwide Short Film Festival. Top honours for Best Live Action Short goes to Nicolas Silhol for My Name is Dominic / Tous les enfants s'appellent Dominique which enables its eligibility for the 2009 Academy Awards. Congratulations to all the award winners and honourable mentions!

Audience Award
Paul Rondin Is... Paul Rondin / Paul Rondin est... Paul Rondin, directed by Frederick Vin (See review on Day 2)

Best Live Action Short
Winner: Nicolas Silhol for My Name is Dominic / Tous les enfants s'appellent Dominique (See review on Day 4)
Honourable Mention: Joost Van Ginkel for Sand / Zand (See review on Day 4)

Best Emerging Canadian Filmmaker
Winner: Aparna Kapur for Amma
Honourable Mention: Joseph Johnson Cami & Ayelen Liberona for Becoming

Best Cinematography in a Canadian Short
Winner: Cinematographer Miroslaw Baszak for The Water
Honourable Mention: Director/Cinematographer Pedro Pires for Danse Macabre

Best Animated Short
Hanna Heilborn and David Aronowitsch for Slaves

Best Canadian Short
Ky Nam Le Duc for Land of Men / Terre des hommes

The Best Experimental Short
Winner: Pedro Pires for Danse Macabre
Honourable Mention: Servane Phillips and Nathalie Robison for Inscape (See review on Day 2)

Best Documentary Short
Rhys Graham for Skin

The Best Performance prize (Female)
Leora Rivlin for Wind Chimes

Best Performance Prize (Male)
Jack Wouterse for Sand / Zand (See review on Day 4)

Best Performance Prize (Ensemble)
Kil-ho Kim & Tae-hoon Lee for Auld Lang Syne

Screenplay Giveaway Prize
Kate Hewlett for She Said Lenny

The Worldwide Short Film Festival ran from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Jumat, 19 Juni 2009

Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 Day 3 - Thursday June 18/09

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I love the little festival program boxes that you find at the festival venues. They are so cute! Day 3 was a day that was a bit of a different choice, I went to one screening: Celebrity Shorts. Think program is made up of shorts by familiar names, but instead of seeing them on screen they are directing. On average the shorts are longer than other programs, mostly American and every single one is live action, fiction with no experimental films. It's all narrative here. No Q&A but the screening certainly had a full house of smart dressers whom responded very well to the program.

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Thankfully with this grey weather the line at the ROM is inside (via the South Entrance). If was a busy night - were you there?

Eve
Dir: Natalie Portman
Cast: Lauren Becall, Ben Gazzarra, Olivia Thirby
USA, 22 minutes

Exploring the faces we hide behind and from, tempered by nostalgia and loss we find ourselves riding alongside a third wheel in a day between grandmother and granddaughter. I enjoyed the blending and awareness the two had of each others lifestyles and habits, however the repeated attempts and deflection from a real connection kept the tone unfulfilled.

Monday Before Thanksgiving
Dir: Courteney Cox
Cast: Laura Dern, Courteney Cox, Rosemary Harris
USA, 19 minutes

Adeptly light handling of complex life events and choices, we are introduced to Theresa a woman who has chosen to live her life alone and how this affects her friendships and family. Laura Dern stars in a refreshing outlook for those who chose to walk down a different path.

One of Those Days
Dir: Hattie Dalton
Cast: Derek Jacobi, Joanna David
UK, 14 minutes

I was glad that the opening credits included a BBC Comedy notation, which let me know it was ok to laugh at this short that follows the administrative process of Judgement Day. If all the deeds in your life were jotted down on paper, how accurate would they be? Strong performances and great art direction made this short quite the enjoyable ride.

Sparks
Dir: Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Cast: Carla Gugino, Eric Stoltz, Xander Berkeley
USA, 24 minutes

A strong story and performances made this short really stand out. Carla Gugino in particular was fascinating to watch as the possible arson suspect to her own house. But what could be the motive? Eric Stoltz plays the private eye determined to find out. An interesting combination of straight narrative injected with weather-reportesque visual depictions to fill in the blanks, this short certainly keeps you guessing what is really going on.

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The Worldwide Short Film Festival runs from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Kamis, 18 Juni 2009

Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 Day 2 - Wednesday June 17/09

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Day 2 at the Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 was full of varied programs and audiences. Started off with Official Selection 1: The Edge of Reason which had a huge audience for a weekday matinee screening, likely from having not 1 but 2 films from Academy Award winners with Chris Landreth (Ryan) latest The Spine and a Wallace and Gromit animated short. Next up was Official Selection 2: Lust for Life which delves into various truths of love be they nostalgic, bizarre and sometimes uncomfortable. Last up was the evening screening of Sci Fi: OUT THERE and they certainly were out there ranging from experimental, animation, faux-documentary and a fair shake of parody. The ones that realky hit the mark though were the old school science fiction based in grounded well thought out ideas that actually made you think: Cold and Dry / Tørt og kjølig (dir: Kristoffer Joner) from Norway and The Survivor of the Hippocampus / Le rescapé de l'hippocampe (dir: Julien Lecat in attendance) from France. It was also a treat to see The Attack of the Robots from Nebula-5 again, which has played at various festivals including the Toronto After Dark Film Festival in 2008.

Below are a selection of reviews from each of the programs including highlights with Q&As with directors in attendance.

Official Selection 1: The Edge of Reason

The Black Dog's Progress
Dir: Stephen Irwin
Animated
UK, 4 minutes

Very clever animated short that bridges the idea of flip books to a unique boundary centric yet shifting landscape. The screen becomes so filled with activity it felt like you could build your own experience by choose (actively or inadvertently) what to watch.

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Bipolar director Gabriela Betschart with Angie Driscoll


Bipolar: An Interview with Richard
Dir: Gabriela Betschart
Documentary
Switzerland, 13 minutes

A unique film that chronicles one mans journey into, around and with Bipolar disorder. The film captures a wide range of stages and responses to the disorder from how it can feel freeing to confining and the battle to maintain balance. A very human and sensitive approach that still presents the bigger questions.

Highlights from Q&A with Gabriela Betschart, director of Bipolar: An Interview with Richard:
- The choice to work with an actor was she was looking for someone in her mind that doesn’t look like Richard himself but had something specific in terms of age and also sympathetic, normal .
- In response to why it a hybrid style instead of a typical documentary was a few reasons, the person it is about is he is working at a company and not everyone knows about the illness. As you can’t control who knows, she didn’t want to create a stygma or show him. Also wanted to make a film that is like the illness, where you question what is real, a dream.
- Richard has seen it, he really liked it and wants to see it again.

After Tomorrow
Dir: Emma Sullivan
Cast: Kika Markham, Claire Hackett, Joseph Mawle, Anthony Taylor
UK, 16 minutes

After Tomorrow was a bit of a genre hopper in terms of tone which pushes audience to continually make, and correct assumptions. An interesting story but it was really the strong acting that kept me on my toes wondering what was really going on.

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The Lady Who Swallowed a Fly director Byrd McDonald with Angie Driscoll

The Lady Who Swallowed a Fly
Dir: Byrd McDonald
Cast: Catherine Grimme, Micah Nelson
USA, 11 minutes

A haunting short that follows a mother driving with her 2 kids, or is she? The balance of reality of blurred using tonal shifts into horror and thriller influences by recreating what feels like hazy memories.

Highlights from Q&A with The Lady Who Swallowed a Fly director Byrd McDonald
- In response to what kind of conflict the director gave the actor, is that the actor came up with a elaborate back story for her character in her head, including an imaginary friend named David that she would talked to. This wasn't planned but some of her talking to ‘David’ ended up being worked into the film during post.
- In response to if there was a worry to too much information being given to the audience, he said that they decided to take out anything that would give too many specifics of the story therefore the audience would have to project on to the character

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Angie Driscoll with The Spine director Chris Landreth and voice actor Robert McCarrol during prescreening Q&A

The Spine
Dir: Chris Landreth (Ryan)
Animated
Voices: Gordon Pinsett, Alberta Watson, Patrice Goodman, Robert McCarrol
Canada, 15 minutes

If you enjoyed the animation style of Ryan, you will be pleased to see The Spine which definitely has a similar feel to it. The story follows a couple whose emotionally responses have manifested to become their physical entrapments. Visually stunning and sometimes jarring it leaves us wondering about if things are beyond 'fixing'.

Highlights for Q&A with The Spine director Chris Landreth and voice actors Robert McCarrol and Patrice Goodman
Robert McCarrol discussed if if preparation for voice acting different by saying that you always find the intention. I made up a voice (does imitation) and Chris said, why don’t you just use your own voice? Chris gave different tactics to get to where I had to go but also gave freedom to improvise.

Chris Landreth on if there crossover with Ryan because of the invented style has grown to a visual storytelling style. Do you think you have innovated it even further? He responded that this film is more experimental than Ryan because that was a documentary and this is a fictional. There was more freedom to express themes with this visual style.

Voice actor Patrice Goodman described working around a visual image by saying that Chris would paint the entire picture for you so you just vocally fill in the blanks. She got involved with the project after from being friends with Chris for 12 years and his partner runs a theatre company that I work in. Knew he was looking for people and offered to help. Originally was doing the scratch track and ended up in actual film.

Wallace and Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death
Dir: Nick Park
Animated
UK, 29 minutes

Confession time - I've never seen any Wallace and Gromit before. I can see what all the fuss is about though, cute animation and great play on with a smart and not-so-smart duo plus lots of physical humour in a richly created world. Audience had the giggles big time through this tale of life, love and bread.

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Official Selection 2: Lust for Life

Inscape
Dir: Servane Phillips, Nathalie Robison
Experimental
Canada, 7 minutes

This experimental film shows contortionist Jinny Jessica Jacinto perform extraordinary movements with a calm strength and grace. I particularly enjoyed the more abstract compositions where it was hard to even tell what exactly was being shown.

Highlights from Q&A with on of Inscape directors Nathalie Robison
- Discussing challenges of the film included that they primarily had 1 day, with no rehearsal, no choreographer and only did 1-2 takes as each move required 45min to 1 hour for the contortionist to warm up.
- After doing a casting call for auditions and almost settling on a male contortionist, because that is something you don’t normally see, but the next day she got a late email from someone including pictures and you tube footage. Turns out the pictures and footage were of Jinny Jessica Jacinto, and that footage was the initial inspiration for the director to create the film in the first place.

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Inscape director Nathalie Robison with Myrocia Watamaniuk, Senior Programmer

Boris
Dir: Daniel Lundquist
Animated
USA, 4 minutes

Boris uses a very organic animation technique that gives the film a relentless feel as the image expand and collapse from pre-existing images on the screen. The story itself is voiced over and shown literally about a boy named Boris who really loves his drum. Relentlessly. At 4 minutes it is the perfect length for the bizarre tempo of the excursion.

Made Up
Dir: Owen Eric Wood
Experimental
Canada, 5 minutes

Identity, desires, likes, stereotypes and judgements are all explores in this 5 minute short. The beauty of it is that the timing and pace of the film is perfect, it is subtle enough to get the point across but also provided the opportunity to check in on moments where you think "but didn't I just see...?" A sensitive touch to a button pushing topic provides a safe space to listen, think and explore judgement without feeling judged. Quite a feat, this film is a rare gem.

Highlights from Q&A with Made Up director/writer/actor Owen Eric Wood
- In response to question regarding inspiration and previous work, there is a connection to the first video the director created which used a similar method of turning his own image to that of his Dad who looks exactly like him but 30 years older. It essentially aged him and brought up the question that as much as we want to be individuals we can't deny our family or genetics.
- With regards to what he hopes people take away from the film is that they don't believe all of the things said in the film, although he likes creating tension and blurring there lines but there are things said that he doesn't believe.
-The film is about change process and converting. It's an analogy of coming out to breaking out of the social norms but then faced with the gay community that has another set of social norms that you are expected to conform to that is contradictory in terms of breaking out of the first, like a paradox.
- Next project is performance art on the street/bus called “The Clothes That Make The Man” as a part of the Montreal International Festival of Art in July.

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Made Up director Owen Eric Wood and Myrocia Watamaniuk, Senior Programmer

Paul Rondin Is... Paul Rondin / Paul Rondin est... Paul Rondin
Dir: Frederick Vin
Cast: Francois Berland
France, 10 minutes

A lot of people take their work home with them. But what if you took it around with you - everywhere you go, and what if your work was being 'the voice' in movie trailers? Often socially awkward but always delightful, this great short film is a must for film buffs and anyone who walks to the beat of a slightly different tune.

Acting for the Camera
Dir: Justin Nowell
Cast: Joe Urla, Mallory June
USA, 14 minutes

Imagine an acting class where you are get the restaurant scene from When Harry Met Sally. Now imagine the acting teacher is a bully to the female student but also throws around phrases like "This is a safe place for you". Uncomfortable throughout, and although there is an argument in there that there is a 'message', I don't particularly know was to benefit from it. It's listed as a comedy, and there was laughter in the audience, some nervous, some not, which overall just made it more uncomfortable.

Love You More
Dir: Sam Taylor-Wood
Cast: Harry Treadaway, Andrea Riseborough
UK, 15 minutes

Fantastic and feverish short set in 1978 with two teens faced with a solitary copy of the new Buzzcocks single. Amazing blend of curiosity, tension and passion it's no suprize this short received a 2009 BAFTA nomination for Best Short Film for films in 2008.

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Sci Fi: OUT THERE

Civilian
Dir: Seaton Lin
Cast: Richard Lund, Mari Stamper
USA, 4 minutes

Interpretive re-enactment of 1960s hypnosis sessions that indicate an abduction. Interesting idea, and had the creepy factor going but somehow felt longer than 4 minutes.

Marooned?
Dir: Ryan Nagata
Cast: Mike McCafferty, Justin Roiland, Dean Pelton
USA, 15 minutes

Sci fi parody that successfully plays with classic Star Trek and B movie geekdom in some new and creative ways. Unfortunate that one off colour joke pulled the charm out. So close to being 100% enjoyable.

The Survivor of the Hippocampus / Le rescapé de l'hippocampe
Dir: Julien Lecat
Cast: Juliette Noureddine, Jean-Pierre Martins, Frans Boyer, Simon Buret
France, 13 minutes

Brilliant short film that manages to visually bring the unimaginable to screen with a bizarre story, creative art direction and a sense of humour to boot. This is great science fiction at work, giving us a fantastic story that feels ludicrous yet works in every way through moments of wide eyed surprize, laughter and sorrow. Beautiful.

Highlights of Q&A with The Survivor of the Hippocampus / Le rescapé de l'hippocampe director Julien Lecat:
-the project was really fast as it was for a contest and chosen in September and by January, 4 months later, everything had to be in place financially and with the locations
-the location was in France where they make cognac, this ties in as the character drinks alcohol it was interesting to have this setting.

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Andrew David Long, Festival Manager with Julien Lecat director The Survivor of the Hippocampus

Cold and Dry / Tørt og kjølig
Dir: Kristoffer Joner
Cast: Jeppe Laursen, Ingar Helge Gimle, Edward Schultheiss
Norway, 12 minutes

Perfect Science Fiction. The story is based in an idea that is completely thought out, interesting, believable but still makes you think. It is social commentary presenting a sad what if? scenario however includes well placed humour and in between we gently ponder big questions like the meaning of life, living and everything. A true stand out film.

Captain Coulier (Space Explorer)
Dir: Lyndon Casey
Cast: Conor Casey, Cody Gear, Dillon Casey, Rachel Petrie, Jay McCarrol
Canada, 13 minutes

The audience was in stitches over this Canadiana space parody that played with the question of what a captain would be like if nothing really happened in space. Interesting idea, however fell back on reinforcing gender stereotypes for comedy.

Highlights of Q&A with Captain Coulier (Space Explorer) director Lyndon Casey:
- two of the actors in the film are his older brothers and Second City trained
- there was a script and they had intention for every scene but there was also a lot of improvisation
- they were several different endings
- they hope to make more films with the characters

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Lyndon Casey director of Captain Coulier (Space Explorer) with Andrew David Long, Festival Manager

The Worldwide Short Film Festival runs from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Selasa, 16 Juni 2009

Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 Day 1 - Tuesday June 16/09

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Day 1 of the Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 started off with a fantastic collection of shorts. The program that opens the festival is Award Winners from Around the World which brings award winning films to the screen from as far away as France, Australia, UK to homegrown and more. The lineup at the Bloor Cinema started early and once everyone was settled in the theatre it had that great sparkling energy of opening night. Having Norman Jewison was in the house helped, as did the seven spectacular shorts.

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Slawko Klymkiw, Executive Director of the CFC Introduces the Evening

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Eileen Arandiga, Festival Director

Next Floor
Dir: Denis Villeneuve (Polytechnique)
Cast: Jean Marchand, Simon Chevalot
Canada, 12 minutes

It's not often I'd rave over a darkly, delicious and grisly film but Next Floor hits all the right marks. Perfectly crafted and balances being way past the line of what is comfortable but always wanting to see what will happen next. A triumph.

Jerrycan
Dir: Julius Avery
Cast: Tristan Burke, Walter Currie
Australia, 14 minutes

A day in the life of a few scuffy kids, at the age where your enemies can still be your friends. What trouble will they get into today? Only time will tell but it is certain kids will be kids. There was an odd sense of calm in this film that showed a fair amount of turmoil, which I appreciated as it felt like it gave the audience permission to relax and just see what happened next.

Gone Fishing
Dir: Chris Jones
Cast: Devon Murray, Bill Paterson
UK, 13 minutes

Gone Fishing took me by surprize. I could tell it was going to be sentimental from the setting and music but it got to me emotionally. Very touching but refreshingly and funny look at life, family and going fishing.

The Secret Life of Beards
Dir: Melanie Levy
Documentary
USA, 6 minutes

Initial reaction to this short was that it was a pretty literal documentary about men with beards. After sitting with it for a bit I realized it touches on a huge array of topics from gender, power, religion, preconceptions, presumptions and stereotypes. All in 6 minutes. The crowd loved it.

Skhizein
Dir: Jeremy Clapin
Animated
France, 14 minutes

This short knocked my socks off, 91cm to be exact. Brillant animated film about a fellow who inadvertantly becomes 91cm away from himself. Verbal description doesn't do it justice as it is a visual play on bizarre idea. Toying with practical solutions to an uncanny situation we are treated to spectacular display of creativity that you can't help by admire and honour through laughter.

The Worldwide Short Film Festival runs from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Senin, 15 Juni 2009

Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009 Preview

It's time for the Worldwide Short Film Festival 2009! How can you not love a festival with a website url of www.shorterisbetter.com? I might be biased on the shorter part, but the festival has been stellar every year I've attended. This year is the festivals 15th year and brings us 295 shorts from 46 countries world wide. Curious to how many films were submitted this year? 3966 films. Wow. That is a lot of film.

The festival kicks off Opening Night on Tuesday June 9, 2009 with a selection of Award Winners from Around the World. The first film noted is the delightfully dark and delicious Next Floor from director Denis Villeneuve (Polytechnique). Next Floor may be familiar as it is one of the selected films of Canada's Top Ten 2008. The program is one of the most eclectic of the festival including Jerrycan which involves rock paper scissors, as well as the more title explanatory The Secret Life of Beards and Teaching the Alphabet. This program repeats on closing night, Sunday June 21, 2009.

There are 12 Official Selection programs which have a collection of shorts revolving around a particular theme. This is where you really can find something for everyone with tastes from political with #4 When Political Gets Personal, to rebellion with #6 Rebels with a Cause, to making it work with #8 Conflict Resolution to even food with #9 Food Chain. Like to play with perception? How about checking out #5 What You See Isn't What You Get. Or if you like to explore spaces there is #10 Concrete & Steal. Tech takes over with #11 Tech-Neurological which includes the hilarious short The Website Is Down: Sales Guy vs Web Dude which will entertain anyone who has been on either side of a tech support call (in other words: everyone).

Feeling patriotic? Have a look at the Canadian programs including Oh! Canada: Canadian Comedy Shorts which includes the fantastic zombie curling short Deadspiel (which was my favourite zombie film of Toronto After Dark Film Festival 2008) and nostalgic commentary Catalogue. More Canadian goodness with CFC Canadian Dramatic Shorts.

If you are looking for something a little more out of this world, there is the Sci Fi: Out There program and of course the two Midnight Mania selections: Creepy and Freaky. Hmm. Those would be good cat names, no? I don't think there are cats involved with the midnight selections but there will be zombie, vampires, bunnies and monsters.

The festival also includes the high profile programs 8 and Celebrity Shorts. 8 is 8 short films inspired by the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) such as achieving universal primary education with The Letter (dir: Gael García Bernal), promoting gender equality and empower women with How Can it Be (dir: Mira Nair), and ensuring environmental stability with The Water Diary (dir: Jane Campion) to start. I'm sure those are familiar names, and we continue with that theme with the Celebrity Shorts program which showcases a fair number of our favourite actors, but this time behind the camera. Selections this year include Sparks (dir: Joseph Gordon-Levitt) starring Eric Stoltz and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, One of Those Days (dir: Hattie Dalton) starring Sir Derek Jacobi and Eve (dir: Natalie Portman) starring Lauren Bacall, Olivia Thirby and Ben Gazzara.

That is just a section of the programs. For more information, check out the Worldwide Short Film Festival website, Program Descriptions, Film Schedule, Symposium Details, Location Information, Box Office Information or Purchase Tickets online.

The Worldwide Short Film Festival runs from June 16-21, 2009 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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