Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

Award at PCFMF



To Rest in Peace won at the Park City Film Music Festival, placing third in the short film category. Congratulations to our composer, Leah Curtis, and the talented team she brought on board.

The picture above is Leah (on the right) with festival director Leslie Harlow.

You can listen to two pieces from To Rest in Peace below, including Salamun Salam, which won 'best world song' at the Hollywood Music in Media Awards in 2010.





Friday, May 25, 2012

SHIFT Kuwait & May Festivals

To Rest in Peace has continued its festival run, screening at four events since the DGA in April.



We're honoured to have screened at SHIFT, a charity event that seeks to shift your perspective on Kuwaiti cinema. I had a chance to see most of these films on the festival circuit, and to meet some of the filmmakers. From all accounts, it was a successful evening, and I wish I could have been there to celebrate.


We also screened with a showcase of USC films at the Newport Beach Film Festival, a few miles away from where we shot most of To Rest in Peace (at El Toro Airfield).


Our Italian premiere happened in Naples, with the Social World Film Festival. 


And we went back to the mountains for the Lake Arrowhead Film Festival in California.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Awards at the DGA



To Rest in Peace screened at the Directors Guild of America yesterday, with a showcase of USC films.

We took home the Fotokem bronze award, and the First Look audience award. Congrats to the cast and crew!

Congrats also to John Dion, our 1st A.D., whose thesis film Cupid won the faculty award for best screenwriting.

And thanks to everyone who came out and made it such a special night.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

First Look 2012


To Rest in Peace is going full circle back to the University of Southern California for the First Look Festival.

Our screening will be at 2PM on Saturday, April 14th. Admission is free, but you should RSVP to hold a spot.

Two other thesis films I worked on are also screening at First Look. John Dion's Cupid, a comedy I edited, is screening at 5PM on Saturday. And Cat Youell's The Mischievous Case of Cordelia Botkin, a historical drama I produced, is playing the following day, at 3:45PM on Sunday. (John was the 1st AD on To Rest in Peace, and Cat was one of the producers).

Looking forward to watching some films I've been wanting to watch for some time, and re-watching others I've seen and enjoyed. Should be a good First Look! See you there.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Interview at Mizna's Twin Cities Arab Film Festival


Here's an interview I did for Martha Low and Ismail Ouassaddine while at Mizna's Twin Cities Arab Film Festival.

Mizna's was one of the best experiences I had on the festival circuit. Lana Barkawi, Rami Azzazi, Marya Morstad, and their team played excellent hosts, and I met a lot of very talented filmmakers, including Tania Khalaf and David Hamilton, who have been supportive allies ever since.

I often get asked about festivals in terms of what possible deals you might get out of them. Sell your film, sell your feature, get an agent, etc. But though To Rest in Peace has been very fortunate, the best rewards you get are the people you meet along the way.

One such ally is Lisa Robertson, who I met at the Breckenridge Film Festival with her short film Commerce. Lisa made a big impact on Exitus Roma. She gave notes on an early draft, helped us find our leading lady, Teri Reeves, and gave notes on an early cut that led to a lot of positive changes. The best aspect of the festival circuit is the opportunity to do better work, by seeing other films, and meeting very talented filmmakers.

To Rest in Peace continues its festival run, on its own momentum. I've shifted focus onto Exitus Roma, and other projects on the horizon, but will continue to update the blog until my new, not project-specific blog is up and running.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

LACMA Muse Young Directors Night



To Rest in Peace is being showcased at the Los Angeles County Museum of the Arts!

Saturday, March 10th at 7:30 PM, for the LACMA Muse Young Directors Night.

This will be one of the last major stops for To Rest in Peace. It's been over a year since we started our festival run, and the film is still going strong. There are a couple of festivals I haven't announced yet, and we get the occasional random screening request. But my main focus now is on other projects: the mini Roman epic I recently shot, and a new feature script I'm writing. More info to come.

Congrats also to my friends Michael Koerbel for In Captivity, and Isaac Ergas for Snow, both screening at LACMA's Young Directors Night. I'm looking forward to seeing those films, and their directors again soon!

The picture of LACMA above is by Sean Conaty, director of photography for To Rest in Peace.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Goldilocks at the IAWTV Awards


Here's a Mingling Media TV interview with Majek Pictures' Michael Koerbel & Anna Elizabeth James, writer-producer-directors of Goldilocks the mobile series, and me, editor of eight episodes, including episode 5, which was nominated for Best Editing at the IAWTV Awards. We had a grand time!

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Atlas Shrugged Documentary


Over the last year, I've been working on a documentary about the novel Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. I started off as an Assistant Editor, and eventually became an Associate Producer. Today, almost a year after I started, we are having our big premier at the ArcLight Hollywood! The film is also playing in over sixty theaters throughout the United States, and it's on the front page of Apple Trailers.


Ayn Rand & the Prophecy of Atlas Shrugged is directed by Chris Mortensen, who describes the film as "a biography of a book and an idea." We had some great interviews, including Albert S. Ruddy, producer of The Godfather Million Dollar Baby. You can see an excerpt from his interview here:


This was a great project to be a part of. I read Atlas Shrugged when I was in high school, recommended to it by my biology teacher, Mr. Bramwell. The novel was breathtaking. I couldn't put it down. It's such a great mystery, such a great love story, and the ideas in it were challenging and engaging. I eventually read all of Ayn Rand's novels, and through her, discovered my favourite novelist, Victor Hugo, and my favourite playwright, Friedrich Schiller. I have three dream projects to adapt and direct one day. Hugo's The Man Who Laughs, Schiller's Don Carlos, and Ayn Rand's We the Living.

Unfortunately, Ayn Rand has become an icon for political campaigns, often used by people she would have disagreed with. Her ideas are constantly being misrepresented and mischaracterized. Recently, the founder of Lululemon Athletica, a yoga clothing company, put a quote from Atlas Shrugged on the company's shopping bags. "Who is John Galt?" To him, this represented the company's vision to "elevate the world from mediocrity to greatness." The public outcry, though, was astounding. People came out calling the quote "offensive," and readily admitting they had never read the novel!

I'm hoping this documentary helps present a more objective view of who Ayn Rand was, and what Atlas Shrugged is all about. We interviewed biographers, CEOs, colleagues, critics. The angle Chris Mortensen took was to look at the novel as a predictive work. There are sections of it that, as radio host Dennis Miller said, read like a modern day AP News story. But the novel was written in 1957!

How did Ayn Rand predict the financial crisis? It's a very interesting story. But the most interesting story is the basic plot of Atlas Shrugged: A mystery about the question "Who is John Galt?" And a drama about Dagny Taggart, whose greatest allies keep disappearing, one by one.

Here is a trailer for the documentary:

Monday, January 9, 2012

Goldilocks nomination for Best Editing at IAWTV


In other project news, I've been nominated for Best Editing at the first annual International Academy of Web Television! Watch the nominated episode of Goldilocks above.

The award ceremony is this Thursday, January 12th, at International CES. You can watch it live-streamed on the IAWTV YouTube page.

Congratulations to Majek Pictures on their continued success!

Goldilocks is a mobile series shot entirely on the iPhone. It's been featured in the New York Times and CNet as a "sign of things to come." In 2010, I edited eight of nine episodes of Goldilocks, the last of which was cut entirely on the iPad 2. That was an all-nighter! But it was fun, and it became the first professional video to be edited on the iPad 2.

It's one of the most exciting projects I've ever worked on. And I hear there are more exciting things to come from team Majek...

Irvine International Film Festival


To Rest in Peace is starting 2012 at the Irvine International Film Festival! The festival runs January 12-16, and our screening is on Saturday, January 14, at 12:30PM.

We shot most of the film at an abandoned air field near Irvine. That's where we staged the car with two dead bodies, which is the story's center of gravity. It took months of location scouting, all over Southern California, to finally find a place that could double for Kuwait. And if you look at the picture above of the festival venue, it looks so much like a Kuwaiti mall!

We're looking forward to going back to Irvine for the film festival.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Two lectures on Art and Film


I have the honour of joining Luc Travers, of Touching the Art, for a double lecture on 'Storytelling in Art and Film' this Saturday, November 19th at 2PM in Aliso Viejo, California. 

Luc will be speaking on John William Waterhouse, and I will be speaking on 'The Cutting Room: How Filmmakers Shape Their Story," with reference to Ridley Scott's Kingdom of Heaven.

Here are the descriptions of the two lectures:


2PM Introducing Waterhouse 
by Luc Travers

Waterhouse is beloved for his poignant and evocative visions.  However, he is a master "storyteller" as well.  In this lecture, we will discuss some of his masterpieces as well as some little-known works to gain a better understanding of how to "read" the "story" in an artwork.


3:30PM The Cutting Room: How Filmmakers Shape Their Story 
by Fawaz Al-Matrouk

Editing has been called "the final rewrite," when the various pieces of a movie are shaped into the story we see. Fawaz will discuss the filmmaker's art, using two very different versions of the same movie, Ridley Scott's Kingdom of Heaven.


I first met Luc on his tour of the San Diego Museum of Art. He showed me a new and more enjoyable way of looking at art. I used to go straight for the information plaque, but Luc makes you really experience the art, and enjoy it without knowing anything about the history, artist, style or subject. 

I've been very excited by Luc's work in bringing this experience to people through his tours, and now his book. So it was doubly an honour when Luc asked me to give a lecture about storytelling in film. And I had the perfect subject in mind, something I've talk about informally, and have always wanted to give a presentation on. Kingdom of Heaven.

Ridley Scott's epic about the crusades was released theatrically, and later re-released with a director's cut. The differences between the two versions are astounding. Subtle changes make for two very different stories, with different characters, obstacles and themes. Comparing the two is a great way to understand a filmmaker's choices in building a story. 

For the lecture, we will watch the opening sequence from each version, and discuss the differences, and how they change our experience. 

If you're in town, we'd love to see you there. If you're not, you can see Luc's lecture by live or recorded webcast. And you can check out his book, Touching the Art: A New Approach to Art Appreciation.

Stay tuned for a report from Mizna's Twin Cities Arab Film Festival. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Mizna's Twin Cities Arab Film Festival


To Rest in Peace will be screening in Minneapolis at Mizna's Twin Cities Arab Film Festival!

We are screening with the feature film City of Life on Saturday, November 12th at 7 PM.

The festival team has gone above and beyond in their preparations, so this promises to be one of the best festivals To Rest in Peace has participated in. Looking forward to it!

More news to come.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

SoCal Best Student Short!


To Rest in Peace won best student short at the SoCal Independent Film Fest! Congrats to the cast & crew.

The picture above is of me and Mir Waiss Najibi at the screening. Mir played one of the dead men that Malek buries in To Rest in Peace.  We were so grateful for his involvement, and for Ralph Lopez. They were both on set for several days, early in the morning, getting into dead man make-up, and always cheerful.

One of my fondest memories of set was a blooper that Mir and Ralph created. We were filming a close-up of the two dead bodies, and before I yelled 'cut,' the bodies came to life, looked around in a daze, and decided to leave. The whole crew had a good laugh.

Our festival run continues. More news to come.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Tacoma Film Festival


To Rest in Peace will be screening this week at the Tacoma Film Festival! We are with the 'International Shorts' program on Sunday, October 9th, 12:40 PM at the Tacoma Art Museum.

I recently discovered that my good friend, Caitlin Thomson, was born in Tacoma. Which is completely tangential, but it gives me the opportunity to link to her work. One of her poems was recently published by Random House in Killer Verse, alongside another of my favourites, Robert Browning. Congrats Caitlin!

TFF looks like a strong festival, with interesting films. We are screening again with Thief, which I have seen a number of times now, and never gotten bored of. It has good performances all around, particularly by Egyptian actor Ayman Samman. If you're in the area, drop by the Tacoma Art Museum for the 'International Shorts' on Sunday!

Friday, September 16, 2011

CENFLO Best Student Short!


To Rest in Peace won the Paul Leder award for Best Student Project at the Central Florida Film Festival! Congrats to our cast & crew. 

Friday, August 26, 2011

NYCIFF Best Student Short!


To Rest in Peace won best student short at the New York City International Film Festival! Congrats to our cast & crew.

Big Bear Lake Int'l Film Festival


To Rest in Peace will be screening at the Big Bear Lake International Film Festival! The festival runs September 15-17. We are nominated for Best Student Short.

Congrats also to my USC classmate Nate Ruegger for his film, Another Life. We screened our films together at Paramount Studios, and we'll be screening together again in Big Bear Lake. Anecdotally, Nate was also the first person I had lunch with when I arrived at USC.

The festival is organized by Monika Skerbelis, who ran the American Pavilion screening in Cannes. She has a good eye for short films, so I look forward to seeing the selection here.

The location of this festival brings back fond memories. One of my favourite production experiences was filming up in Big Bear Lake for Into the Unknown. I co-edited the project with To Rest in Peace editor Ryan Frost, but the first weekend of production I doubled as the script supervisor. The entire crew stayed in one big cabin, which housed a singing moose head. We filmed during day light hours, and barbecued at night. Definitely one of the highlights of my time at USC. Even the first night up, when we couldn't find the cabin in the dark, and had to sleep in the car...

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Action/Cut Short Film Competition


To Rest in Peace is a finalist at the Action/Cut Short Film Competition! We are one of eight shorts selected for the fiction category. Winners will be announced September 1st.

Congrats also to Anthony Bushman, whose thesis film Found (edited by yours truly) was a semi-finalist in the student film category.

Friday, August 19, 2011

NYCIFF Opening Night


Thursday night was the opening of the New York City International Film Festival, a black-tie gala premier of The Last Gamble, held at the Hudson Theater near Times Square.

Standing shoulder to shoulder, elbow to elbow, it seemed like the least likely place to interact with strangers. But the stage was set for a great evening when someone randomly came up to me and asked: "are you Spanish?" "No... Kuwaiti." "Ah! I'm Lebanese!" That was Farah Jouni, director of Fly While Arab. One arabic conversation later, I found myself with the international team behind her New York Film Academy thesis film.


New York is a great city, but it's even better when spending an evening with people who know how to enjoy it. It was a perfect end to the day, which had started with a sleepless red-eye flight from Los Angeles, and a five hour delay in Philadelphia, half of which was spent in the airplane, on the runway, waiting for the rain to pass. Serendipity.

NYCIFF offers the unique experience of showing films on a giant screen in Times Square. That was the vision of Roberto Rizzo, the festival's founder, who welcomed his filmmakers like guests into his home.

The festival includes a film market, with a series of workshops led by Joe Goodavage, director of The Last Gamble.

(As an aside, I had been told the film was inspired by the director's own story. [Spoiler alert:] You can imagine my surprise when the lead character, also Joe G., was brutally murdered at the end with a baseball bat. Fortunately, that part of the semi-autobiographical story was more "semi" and less "autobiographical.")

To Rest in Peace will be screening with NYCIFF on Wednesday, August 24th, 4:30 PM at the Snapple Theater.

And there's more big festival news coming soon, including the announcement of our Canadian premier! Stay tuned.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

CENFLO Paul Leder Award


To Rest in Peace is a finalist for the Paul Leder Award (Best Student Film) at the Central Florida Film Festival! We are representing the University of Southern California, in a group that includes Florida State, Brigham Young, Dodge College and the NY Film Academy.

There will be two screenings during the festival. Friday, September 2nd at 11:10 AM, and Monday, September 4th at 12:15 PM.

Wish us luck!

In other news, our press page is now live. More articles will be posted there as we collect URLs.