INCIDENT BY A BANK a Comedy Short Films

INCIDENT BY A BANK a Comedy Short Films


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Shot using a single camera, 90 people meticulously recreate a failed bank robbery that took place in Stockholm in June 2006. This short is #Funny or #Comedy Short Films.

‘Incident by a Bank’ it is one of week Staff Pick Premiere! on @Vimeo

Written & Directed by Ruben Östlund

Given Sweden’s reputation as a beacon of social democratic values, it’s somewhat ironic that the real-life robbery portrayed in today’s Staff Pick Premiere took place in Stockholm. Adding to this same sense of irony is the fact that director Ruben Östlund was en route to the Swedish Film Institute to secure public funds for his feature film Involuntary when he and producer Erik Hemmendorff witnessed the attempted robbery. Strolling past a jewelry store in the Scandinavian capital, Hemmendorff turned to Östlund and gestured toward two men sitting on an idling moped. “Do they have ski masks on them?” he asked. The events that subsequently unfolded served as the basis for “Incident by a Bank.” “It was a very absurd and surreal experience,” Östlund reminisces. The short went on to win the Golden Bear at Berlinale in 2010 and is now streaming worldwide for the first time ever, exclusively on Vimeo.

Shot in 2009, years before the current proliferation of single-take films, Östlund took advantage of newly-released 5K technology to shoot a stationary master shot within which all of the action transpires. He then employed digital zooms and pans to follow the action as it played out, giving the resulting film the impression of a single take. “I digitally zoomed up to 400% in the picture, but I think it works quite well [despite] the loss of quality,” says Östlund. He is quick to point out, however, that there are four hidden cuts within the film. “We did only 14 takes, which is not much for me. I usually do around 40 takes when I shoot. But I felt I had it when I was walking home [from the set] that night.”

INCIDENT BY A BANK a Comedy Short Films Staff Pick Premiere

More than its unique production process, the film’s true strength is its ability to subvert the popular narrative surrounding heists as they are commonly dramatized in cinema. Östlund eschews the carefully coordinated team of professionals (a la Ocean’s Eleven) for a motley pair of petty thieves who can hardly pilot a scooter. In lieu of heroic bystanders who rise to the occasion to overpower their aggressors, we see oblivious teenagers and morbidly fascinated gawkers who cannot be bothered to call the police. “I wanted the film to stay true to my experience,” asserts Östlund. “I was a complete cowardly bystander and that’s really the most interesting part to me.”

The inevitable gulf between our reaction to real-life emergencies and their implausible cinematic representations is a central theme in Östlund’s work. His 2014 black comedy, Force Majeure, explores the implications of a father’s fleeting moment of cowardice when his family is threatened by an avalanche. It was in part inspired by a YouTube video of an avalanche bearing down on mesmerized, smartphone-wielding bystanders, which was conspicuously devoid of the drama and heroism that would have likely characterized any Hollywood portrayal of the same event. In “Incident by a Bank,” the same dynamic applies: a life-threatening situation emerges and nobody springs to action.

“Incident by a Bank” is a unique instance of life imitating art (the real robbery), only to be later imitated by art (the film itself). However, the line between fact and fiction only got blurrier after the film was released, according to an anecdote from Östlund: “During the shoot, I had a couple of extras film the robbers with their cell phones. That material was used as a promo for the film. Half a year later, I get a link from a friend who watched an American TV show called ‘The Top Ten Dumbest Criminals in the World.’ In seventh place, they used the clip from the shoot, claiming it was authentic material.” Should we really be that surprised?

IVAN’S NEED an Animated Short Films

IVAN’S NEED an Animated Short Films


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Ivan has an obsession for kneading the dough.

‘Ivan’s Need’ of the week’s Staff Pick Premiere! on @Vimeo

Lukas Suter: lukassuter.com/

Soundtrack by Tim & Puma Mimi

Produced by Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts

animation.hslu.ch/

It is the inspiration for countless paintings, songs, statues, and dances; the powerful vessel from which all of the mankind emerged; and the irresistible form that brings admirers to their knees. “The nakedness of a woman is the work of God,” said poet William Blake, not thinking that perhaps the creator of such a work of art is probably a really talented woman.

At least that is the case in today’s Staff Pick Premiere, “Ivan’s Need.” Breadmaker Ivan has one god — the doughy, soft, malleable combination of bread, eggs, and flour that he mixes every day. That all changes when he is summoned with a Rapunzel-esque flourish to the bedroom of a customer named Alva. The little man’s livelihood is kneading dough into loaves of bread, but Ivan discovers a whole new world — the female form — in this charming love letter to animal sexuality and the curves of a woman’s body.

With subtle references to the lady parts Ivan encounters during his journey (according to the filmmakers, they picked the name Ivan because it shares letters with “vagina” and the object of his desire, Alva, sounds like “vulva”), this charming piece is a silly, albeit honest, portrayal of bodies of all shapes, sizes, and colors. And, more importantly, the pleasure of all sexual partners. According to filmmakers Veronica Montano, Manuela Leuenberger, and Lukas Suter:

“It was important to us to find another way to depict sexuality. [Alva is] not the typical sex symbol, her breasts aren’t bouncy and balloony, they give in when Ivan touches them. Although she is exactly what the male character is interested in (as we know it from many erotic films), she also has confidence and her own sexual desires which she isn’t afraid to indulge. We not only show what it feels like for him to touch her, but also what it feels like for her to be touched.”

IVAN’S NEED an Animated Short Films Staff Pick Premiere

Animations frankly addressing female sexuality have been popping up like (welcome) weeds in the short film world in the past couple of years: Lori Malepart-Traversy’s “Le Clitoris,” Renata Gasiorowska’s “Pussy,” and Anna Ginsburg’s “Private Parts,” to name a few. It’s clear that animation has the power to pull people into uncomfortable subjects. In “Ivan’s Need,” that’s apparent in the bright, playful, and fun portrayal of a woman’s forward invitation for sex and her subsequent pleasure. It’s relatable, yet far enough away from the reality that it resembles Saturday morning cartoons. Maybe cute drawings of clitorises and pillowy breasts are just what we need to make these topics easier to talk about in real life.

And expanding our minds is exactly what the filmmakers of “Ivan’s Need” is aiming for. When asked what they’d like viewers to take away from the film they said, “That we should allow ourselves to be dreamy, naive, and childish. That it’s important to keep an innocent curiosity for sexuality. And don’t forget to love.”

FATA MORGANA

FATA MORGANA A Drama Short Films


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Inspired by true events, a grieving couple is forced to examine their marriage when they journey from China to the United States for the funeral for their only child.

‘Fata Morgana’ is this week’s Staff Pick Premiere!

Written & Directed by Amelie Wen

Death is never straightforward. Its effects reverberate through loved ones, acquaintances, and beyond. Each person experiences grief differently, but often times it can be a reckoning for one’s own life. For filmmaker Amelie Wen, she encountered death when a college friend was gravely injured in a skiing accident and fell into a deep coma. Before her friend passed, Wen visited her family in the hospital and was profoundly touched by the tremendous care and dignity with which the parents handled their loss and grief. That moment shaped Wen and was the inspiration for her acclaimed AFI thesis film and this week’s Staff Pick Premiere, “Fata Morgana.”

Opening on a middle-aged Chinese couple after they’ve learned about the death of their only daughter, Wen’s camera lingers on the emotions etched into their faces. It is the couple’s first time in the United States, and the challenges of organizing funeral rites and dealing with cultural differences amidst their grief start to unravel them. Remarkably assured, the film captures poignant moments and subtle shifts in the couple with an astounding realism. The short is told mostly from the perspective of the mother (played by Mardy Ma), in part because she speaks English, whereas her husband does not, but also because Wen’s film attempts to address the many contradictions of the modern educated Chinese woman. Ma’s character is the crux of the film; she has the most agency, because of her education, but is also the most constricted because of her traditional religious beliefs. It is the examination of these elements that makes the film: the quiet way she is patronized for her funeral wishes, the subtle sexism of not being handed the restaurant bill, and the complex emotions of addressing China’s one-child policy.

The title “Fata Morgana” perfectly captures those contradictions with a bit of magical realist flair. It references a specific type of mirage, where a narrow band develops just above the horizon giving the illusion of floating objects, buildings, or landscapes. This distortion of reality is an apt metaphor for the sorrow following a death. Uprooted from their reality, the couple drifts from a jeweler to a crematorium to a restaurant searching for answers in their customs and beliefs, but instead are confronted with the realities of urban American culture. What ostensibly begins as a film about the death of a child and the process to send her to rest quietly transforms into an examination of a couple’s relationship and their own lives. “We see the shadow when there is light,” Wen says. “Likewise, we understand death through the eyes of the living.” For Wen, this was always the way she wanted to handle the story — to explore not the death itself, but how family and friends handle grief in very different and personal ways. It’s a powerful film and one that will continue to reverberate well after it ends.

FATA MORGANA A Drama Short Films amelie wen

AWARDS:

Spirit Award — Brooklyn Film Festival 2016, USA
Student Film Award — Hamptons International Film Festival 2016, USA
Grand Jury Prize for Student Short Films — Dallas International Film Festival 2016, USA
Excellence in Short Filmmaking — Asian American International Film Festival 2016, USA
Best International Short Film — MoliseCinema Film Festival 2016, Italy
New Directors New Visions Award — Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival 2016, USA
Board of Directors’ Award — North Carolina Film Festival 2016, USA
First Prize in Student Narrative Category — Golden Rooster Awards 2016, China
Best Actress Award — Film Lab Festival 2016, Italy
Best International Short — Samyak International Short Film and Documentary Festival 2016, India
Best Actress Award — HyperFest 2016, Romania
Best Narrative Short — Queens World Film Festival 2017, USA

OFFICIAL SELECTIONS:

AFI Fest 2016, USA
Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival 2016, France
Palm Springs International ShortFest 2016, USA
Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival 2016, USA
Flickers’ Rhode Island International Film Festival 2016, USA
Heartland Film Festival 2016, USA
Hamptons International Film Festival 2016, USA
Flickerfest’s International Short Film Festival 2017, Australia
Molise Cinema Film Festival 2016, Italy
Brooklyn Film Festival 2016, USA
LA Shorts Fest 2016, USA
Aesthetica Short Film Festival 2016, UK
Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival 2016, USA
Holly Shorts Film Festival 2016, USA
Ismailia International Film Festival for Shorts and Documentaries 2016, Egypt
Dallas International Film Festival 2016, USA
Boston International Film Festival 2016, USA
Le Court Nous Tient 2016, France
Asian American International Film Festival 2016, USA
Tangier International Film Festival 2016, Morocco
Festival Internacional de Escuelas de Cine 2016, Uruguay
Calgary International Film Festival 2016, Canada
CAA Moebius Film Festival 2016, USA
AFMA Film Festival of Young Cinema 2016, USA
Cine Gear Expo Film Series 2016, USA
First Step Film Festival 2016, Albania
American Film Festival 2016, Poland
FeSanCor Chilean International Short Film Festival 2016, Chile
Film Lab Festival 2016, Italy
North Carolina Film Festival 2016, USA
Denver Film Festival 2016, USA
金鸡百花电影节 Golden Rooster Awards 2016, China
丝绸之路电影节 Silk Road International Film Festival 2016, China
Lviv International Short Film Festival Wiz-Art, Ukraine
Objectifs Centre for Photography and Film, Singapore
华语青年影像论坛 Chinese Young Generations Film Forum, China
Samyak International Short Film and Documentary Festival 2016, India
Hyperion International Student Film Festival 2016, Romania
Jogja – NETPAC Asian Film Festival 2016, Indonesia
成都国际短片电影节 Chengdu International Short Film Week 2016, China
厦门双栖影展 Xia Men Amphibia Film Festival 2016, China
北美华人导演短片展 North America Chinese Directors Short Film Tour 2016, USA/China
Mediterranean Film Festival Cannes 2016, France
Stuttgart Filmwinter 2017, Germany
Colortape International Film Festival 2017, Australia
Queens World Film Festival 2017, US
Dona I Cinema – Mujer y Cine – Woman & Film Festival 2017, Spain
Cyprus International Motion Festival 2017, Cyprus
Akbank Short Film Festival 2017, Turkey
ClujShorts International Film Festival 2017, Romania
MEDIAWAVE – ANOTHER CONNECTION International Film Festival 2017, Hungry
International Film Festival of Uruguay 2017, Uruguay

Images:

Valencia Road

Valencia Road A Drama Short Films


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While driving to the reading of her father’s will, a woman is faced with an anomaly on the side of the road.

Present by ELO films elofilms.com

Directed by Logan George

Written by Celine Held & Logan George

Director of Photography: Lowell A. Meyer

Starring: Celine Held & Mia Vallet

Additional Cast: Richard Kemp, Tyler Butler, Charlotte Arnoux

Assistant Director: Geoffrey Jean-Baptiste

Location Sound Mixer: Chris Bell

Assistant Camera: Ian Wexler

SFX Make Up: Doug Fairall

Stunts: RAM Automotive Inc.

Stunt Coordinators: Rick Emery & Katie Coradi

Editor & Colorist: Logan George

Composer: David Baloche

Supervising Sound Editors: Joanna Fang & Dennis Hu

Foley Mixer: Philip Kim, Mixed @ Alchemy Post Sound

Music: Yppah – “Film Burn”

Poster Design: Logan George

Valencia Road A Drama Short Films ELO

Scent of Geranium

Scent of Geranium an Animated Short Films


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Immigration is a new chapter in one’s life, a chapter with unexpected events that can take one’s life down paths different from the one imagined. This film is an autobiographical account of the director’s experience with immigration. A Film by Naghmeh Farzaneh.

“An Animated Short Films ‘Scent of Geranium’ picks this week’s by @Vimeo Staff Pick Premiere!”

There’s no denying that we’re living in a defining cultural moment. A war of ideas is taking place on many fronts and fundamental principles once considered secure are being threatened by fear of the other. Anti-immigrant vitriol and policy are gaining support, while bans, deportations, and border walls have become ubiquitous in public dialogue. With pundits and politicians engaged in games of rhetoric, it’s sometimes easy to forget about the very human lives at stake. With this in mind, we’re proud to feature Naghmeh Farzaneh’s “Scent of Geranium” as this week’s Staff Pick Premiere. By using her own experience as an Iranian international student in the U.S., Farzaneh gives voice to the fears, doubts, and complex range of emotions that immigrants face and makes a powerful call for a more compassionate approach.

Farzaneh wanted to share her own unique story — leaving Iran as a young woman, at a time when the “Arab Spring” dominated headlines. But she also recognized that she shared feelings of anxiety, homesickness, and isolation with many other immigrants around her. She used this to ground the film in specific events but also touch on larger themes of alienation. When asked about her intention for film, she points to two groups: “First, for those who haven’t experienced immigration, I think it is important for them to know the challenges and consequences an immigrant faces every day. And second, for those who have had this life-changing experience, I want them to know that they are not alone, that all immigrants have been challenged by the experience of immigration.”

To capture her journey, Farzaneh used her training as a painter to mix of traditional and digital techniques. The result is a beautiful hand-drawn animation that feels like a painting come to life. Her minimalist black-and-white style adds another emotional layer to the film, as flourishes of the watercolor act as visual accents but also balance difficult memories.

Metamorphosis is a running theme throughout the film, used as an apt metaphor for immigration. It is most vividly captured by the mother’s geraniums, which bloom in the final frames, but metamorphosis is also present in the clever compositions and transitions between memories. This, along with Farzaneh’s witty observations, gives the film its ultimately hopeful tone. According to Farzaneh, this was in response to the generous friends that made her feel welcome. “From the very first day I arrived in this country I met many amazing people who changed my life in so many ways. They helped me to learn, find my place and to shape myself in this new chapter.”

With such a personal story, the film has the unique power to look past generic headlines and offer new perspectives and shape how we engage with each other. In the wake of our current political climate, “Scent of Geranium” is a necessary reminder of our role as friends, neighbors, and colleagues to not only exercise empathy, but actively support those in our communities who might feel paralyzed in their new country.

Scent of Geranium an Animated Short Films

AWARDS: 

Winner, Audience Award, Best short animated, San Francisco Independent Film Festival, 2017
Winner, Best Student Director, San Francisco Frozen Film Festival, 2017
Finalist, 60th CINE Golden Eagle, USA,2017
Finalist, Heartland Film Festival, Indianapolis, 2016
Winner, Special Mention, International Short Film Festival Oberhausen, Germany, 2017
Winner, Best film, Elephant Programme, Animateka Festival, Slovenia, 2016
Winner, 2nd place, student Films, 47th ASIFA East Animation Festival, NY, 2016
Winner, Faculty Award, School of Film and Animation, RIT, 2016
Winner, Designation in Fine art – Adobe Achievement Award, 2016
Special Jury Award, New Orleans Film Festival, New Orleans, 2016
Semi Finalist, Iranian Film Festival, San Francisco, 2017
Jury Special Mention, Festival du film court en plein air de Grenoble, France, 2017
Winner, Best Animated Short Film, Hong Kong Art-house Film Festival, 2016

OFFICIAL SELECTION: 

63rd International Short Film Festival Oberhausen, Germany, 2017
25th Anima Mundi, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2017
ITFS- 24th Stuttgart Festival of Animated Film, Germany, 2017
Tricky Women Festival, Austria, 2017
Savannah Film Festival, Savannah, 2016
Mosaic World Film Festival
Animaphix International Animation Festival, Sicily, Italy, 2017
San Francisco Frozen Film Festival, San Francisco, 2017
30th Leeds International Film Festival, Leeds, UK, 2016
Manchester Animation Festival, UK, 2016
Animation Block party, Brooklyn, 2016
Sydney World Film Festival (summer edition), Australia 2017
18th San Diego Asian Film Festival, San Diego, 2017
TAAFI, Toronto Animation Arts Festival International, Toronto, Canada,2016
Anibar Animation Festival, Albania, 2016
Documentarist Istanbul Documentary Days, Istanbul, Turkey, 2017
57th ZLÍN FILM FESTIVAL, Czech Republic, 2017
La Guarimba International Film Festival, Italy, 2017
Northwest Animation Festival, Oregon, 2017
VAFI – International Children and Youth Animation Film Festival Varaždin, 2017
Albuquerque Film & Music Experience (AFME), New Mexico, 2017
Universe Multicultural Film Festival, CA, 2017
The West Virginia Mountaineer Short Film Festival, 2017
Columbus International Film and Video Festival, Ohio, 2017
Animac, Mostra Internacional de Cinema D’Animacio’ de Catallunua, 2017
Montclair Film Festival, New Jersey, 2017
Athens International Film and Video Festival, Ohio, 2017
Festival du film court en plein air de Grenoble, France, 2017
Lviv International Short Film Festival Wiz-Art, Ukraine, 2017
Draw tactic’s 2D or not 2D Animation Festival, Seattle, WA, 2017
VOID – International Animation Film Festival
Reggio Film Festival, Italy, 2016
Peace Builder Film Festival, New Delhi, India, 2016
Orlando Film Festival, 2016
Manhattan Independent Film Festival, New York, 2016
South Texas Underground Film Festival,2016
RIT Honor Show, Rochester Institute of Technology, NY, 2016
Euro Fest, European International Film Festival, St. Petersburg, Russia 2016
Iranian Film Festival Zurich, 2016
Immigration Film Festival, DC, 2016
Athens ANIMFEST, Athens, Greece, 2016
Anifilm, Troben, Czech Republic, 2016
Golden Kuker-Sofia” Festival, Bulgaria, 2016
Doc Sunback Film Festival, Mulvane, Kansas, 2016
Film Score and Scruffy City Film & Music Festival, Knoxville, TN, 2016
Capital City Film Festival, Lansing, MI,2016
La Feminista Series, Los Angeles, CA, 2016
Vaughan Film Festival, Vaughan, Canada, 2016
Los Angeles CineFest, CA, 2016

Images:

The Baby (2014)

The Baby (2014) Drama Short Films by Ali Asgari


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Narges and her friend have just a few hours to find someone to take care of her baby for some days.

A film by Ali Asgari.

“A Short Films present by New Europe Film Sales”

Venice Film Festival Official Selection (Orizzonti)

Director: Ali Asgari

Film series: More than two hours Film Series

Cast: Sahar Sotoodeh, Safoora Kazempoor, Faezeh Bakhtiar

Screenplay: Ali Asgari, Farnoosh Samadi Frooshani

Producers: Riccardo Romboli, Sasan Salour

Rapha Rides LA: A Documentary Short Films

Rapha Rides LA: A Documentary Short Films (with Geoff McFetridge)


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“How do you read a place by looking at the space between the things it appears to be?”

One of our favorites in our series of six US city portraits for Rapha; this one featuring artist and designer, Geoff McFetridge’s insightful perspective on cycling as a way to understand the many worlds of LA.

Is Los Angeles a cycling city after all?

Production Co: Avocados and Coconuts

Executive Producer: Dalia Burde

Creative Director: Amani King

Director/Cinematographer/Editor: Spencer MacDonald

Production Manager: Bijan Rafie-Tari

Aerials: Drew Kass

Art Director: David Evans

Sound Mix: Chris Konovaliv @ Audiolux

Color: Chris Martin @ MFD

Client: Rapha

Music: Y La Bamba

Rapha Rides LA A Documentary Short Films (with Geoff McFetridge)

 

SEAM: A Sci-Fi Short Films

SEAM: A Sci-Fi Short Films by Master Key


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In the not-too-distant future, a tenuous peace between humans and remarkably human-like “machines”—some don’t even know they’re not real—is tested when synthetics begin spontaneously exploding. A military-led search for these unwitting suicide bombers begins, sending a terrified machine woman and her human partner on the run. (synopsis was written by Cheryl Eddy, IO9).

A VFX, Sci-Fi Short Films Presented by Master Key.

See #VFX and “Behind the Scenes” seamfilm.com.

SEAM the film A Sci-Fi Short Films by Master Key

SECURITY DEPOSIT: A Comedy Short Films

SECURITY DEPOSIT: A Comedy Short Films


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After a recent breakup, two twentysomething exes are forced to put fresh wounds aside and band together in order to get back their security deposit from their cold-blooded landlord.

A #Comedy Short Films, Enjoying #Funny Moments in Short.

Directed by Will Eisenberg

Written by Aaron & Will Eisenberg

Produced by Ian McClellan and Blerim Gjoci

Cast: Aaron Eisenberg, Jennette McCurdy, Colton Dunn, Matthew Broussard, Randy & Jason Sklar

Leg, Arm, Head: A Musical Short Films

Leg, Arm, Head: A Musical Short Films by Scout Stuart


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Told without dialogue or a #musical score ‘Leg, Arm, Head’ depicts a highly controlled #dancer, as she moves away from the uniformity and discipline of ballet to explore her own identity as an individual.

Writer and Director: Scout Stuart

Producer: Sophie Broadgate

Executive Producers: Anna Seifert-Speck, Wendy Bevan-Moggs, Doug Smith (for shine a light)

Cinematographer: Ralph Pritchard

Cast: Hannah Buckley, Etta Fusi

Music: “She looks like you” written and performed by Sean Nicholas Savage. Licensed by/courtesy of Domino Publishing Company Limited (PRS)

Leg Arm Head A Musical Short Films by Scout Stuart