GLASGOW SHORT FILM FESTIVAL 11 – 15 March 2015 `lkqbkqp Introduction 3 Award Winners Screening 4 Scottish Competition 5 International Competition 6-7 Calendar 8-9 Vertical Cinema 10 Strange Electricity 10 Jennifer Reeder 10 Daniel Wolfe Music Video Masterclass 10 Focus on Ukraine 11 Let Glasgow Flourish 11 A Wall Is A Screen 11 Short Com with Greg Hemphill 11 Luminous Latitude: Artists’ Film Touring Programme 12 12th Player 12 Short Stuff 12 Family Shorts 12 The Art School & Big Screen present 00:01:00 13 The Skinny Short Film Award 13 Filming The List 13 The Short Road to Features 13 Symposium: Short Film (and) Criticism 14 Anatomy of a Short Film Programme 14 Duane Hopkins In Conversation: Directing Actors 14 Kevin B Lee: Desktop Documentary Workshop 14 Ani Jam 15 UWS Symposium: Creativity and Form 15 Panel: What Next? 15 Meet the Filmmakers 15 www.facebook.com/glasgowshortfilmfestival Twitter: @GlasgowSFF #GSFF15 Cover Image: Jane Carroll / Clyde Film / 1985 qf`hbqp STANDARD PRICE TICKETS £6 (£5 concessions) Some events are individually priced or free of charge – see listings for details. CERTIFICATION Films not certified by the BBFC are marked N/C and accompanied by an age recommendation i.e. N/C 15 + (suitable for ages 15 and older, no-one under 15 will be admitted). elt ql _rv ONLINE From Wednesday 28 January tickets can be purchased from www.glasgowfilm.org/gsff. Tickets can be purchased online until one hour before the screening. IN ADVANCE From Wednesday 28 January you can purchase tickets for most events from Glasgow Film Theatre (12 Rose Street, G3 6RB). You can call Box Office on 0141 332 6535. Please note that there is a £1.50 transaction fee for telephone bookings. You can collect advance tickets from Glasgow Film Theatre up until 9pm the day before the performance. Please note that advance purchases can only be made online at www.glasgowfilm.org/gsff or at GFT. DURING THE FESTIVAL Between Wednesday 11 March and Sunday 15 March, tickets for any GSFF event can be collected or purchased at the screening venue. Please see www.glasgowfilm.org for full terms and conditions. O Glasgow Film Theatre 12 Rose Street, G3 6RB www.glasgowfilm.org, 0141 332 6535 P The Art School: GSA Students’ Association 20 Scott Street, G3 6PE www.theartschool.co.uk, 0141 353 4530 Q citizenM 60 Renfrew Street, G2 3BW www.citizenm.com/societym, 0141 404 9489 sbkrbp N CCA (Festival Hub) 350 Sauchiehall Street, G2 3JD www.cca-glasgow.com, 0141 352 4900 R The Briggait 141 Bridgegate, G1 5HZ 0141 553 5890 The Glue Factory (not shown on map) 15 Burns Street, G4 9SE www.thegluefactory.org UWS Creative Media Academy (not shown on map) Film City, 401 Govan Road, G51 2QJ www.uws.ac.uk, 0141 445 7244 O di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i fkqolar`qflk Last year was an extraordinary time in the People’s Republic of Glasgow, and in its aftermath 2015 can’t help but feel like a year of self-questioning and transition. GSFF is in transition too, as we wave a fond farewell to our mother festival and wander into the faintly warmer, longer days of mid-March. So the theme of transition is woven throughout this year’s programme. Our opening event imagines a new direction for cinema; specifically, 90˚ clockwise. Vertical Cinema breathes new life into 35mm film projection and creates a monolith to rival Kubrick’s ape-botherer. Archive strand Let Glasgow Flourish revisits the high hopes and the low blows of regeneration in the city, considering communities in transition. Further afield, Ukraine is undergoing a particularly violent period of transition, and we welcome programmers from the Lviv International Short Film Festival to present new work responding directly to current events in the country. Daniel Wolfe, the man who painstakingly recreated an early 90s warehouse rave for Chase & Status’ Blind Faith, will present his music videos and talk about his transition to features. We’re delighted to welcome from Chicago the ‘King of the Video Essays’, Kevin B Lee, to introduce us to the emerging genre Desktop Documentary. And our competition selection showcases the cutting edge of new filmmaking, devouring the boundaries of filmmaking conventions. Massive thanks as ever to funders Creative Scotland, to catalogue sponsor Glasgow Film Office, to programme supporter Goethe-Institut Glasgow, and to indispensable venue partner CCA. We’re indebted to Film Hub Scotland and Bar 91 for supporting our monumental opening event, and we warmly thank Monir Mohammed of Mother India, for once again generously sponsoring the Scottish Short Film Award. This is the fourth year of Mother India’s support for emerging Scottish film talent, and we applaud Monir’s loyalty and commitment to the Scottish film industry! Enjoy the Festival. GSFF will publish a catalogue with full listings of all films, as well as exclusive articles and filmmaker interviews. The catalogue will be available to buy for £2 at CCA and GFT during the festival. Full listings will also appear on our website www.glasgowfilm.org/gsff Glasgow Short Film Festival is an operating name of Glasgow Film Theatre (GFT). GFT is registered as a charity (No SC005932) with the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator. _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc P `ljmbqfqflkp p`lqqfpe peloq cfij ^t^oa Once again we showcase the most exciting new work emerging from across Scotland. Twenty-seven films screen across four programmes of new Scottish work. The Scottish Short Film Award is sponsored by Mother India, and honours inspiration and innovation in new Scottish cinema. It carries a cash prize of £1,500. You will have the chance to vote for your favourite to win the Audience Award. The winner of this year’s Scottish Audience Award will be invited to create the GSFF16 trailer. _fii alrdi^p ^t^oa clo fkqbok^qflk^i peloq cfij GSFF stages its international competition in GFT’s state-of-the-art third screen, and we expect many of the filmmakers to attend and take part in short Q&As after each screening. Forty-two films have been selected from over 1,100 submissions to compete for the 2015 Bill Douglas Award for International Short Film. Named in honour of Scotland’s greatest filmmaker, this prize will be awarded to the film that best reflects the qualities found in the work of Bill Douglas: honesty, formal innovation and the supremacy of image and sound in cinematic storytelling. The award carries a cash prize of £1,200. You will have the chance to vote for your favourite to win the Audience Award. `e^kkbi Q ^t^oa clo fkkls^qflk fk pqlovqbiifkd A shortlist of ten films drawn from the Scottish competition and from UK films within the international competition will compete for the Award for Innovation in Storytelling, supported by Channel 4’s Alpha Fund and worth £500. ^t^oa tfkkbop CCA THEATRE Sunday 15 March (20.30) 2h, N/C 15+ First chance to catch the prize-winning films of Glasgow Short Film Festival 2015. We will announce and screen the recipients of the jury awards, as well as the films voted the favourite of the audience in each competition. Also screening will be the results of the 48 hour Ani Jam animation challenge and the winning films in The Art School and Big Screen’s one minute short competition. End the festival on a cinematic high, in the presence of the winning filmmakers and our other special guests. Q di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i p`lqqfpe `ljmbqfqflk NW m^obkqella CCA THEATRE Thursday 12 March (21.15) 1h45m, N/C 15+ The weight of the older generation bears heavily on the protagonists of the first selection. Whether present or long gone, mum and dad are always with us, guiding us, getting in our way, giving us the guilts bigtime. The programme includes two documentaries from Scottish Documentary Institute’s Bridging the Gap scheme, films by Glasgow filmmakers Raisah Ahmed and Artur Zaremba, and the long-awaited premiere of David Lumsden’s CGI epic, Boat. p`lqqfpe `ljmbqfqflk OW a^oh a^vp CCA THEATRE Friday 13 March (19.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ A shadowy journey through the enigmatic, seamy side of Scottish filmmaking, from vampires to animal experiments, exploitation and death. Isolation leads to increasingly paranoid competitiveness in Jeppe Rohde Nielsen’s Game, whilst a strange form of reunion takes place in Tim Courtney’s Sunsets & Silhouettes. Also featuring a new work by artist Michelle Hannah, the BAFTA-nominated Monkey Love Experiments and a deathly ride on a Vincent Black Lightning motorbike, courtesy of animator Cat Bruce. p`lqqfpe `ljmbqfqflk PW lcc qeb m^qe CCA THEATRE Saturday 14 March (19.15) 1h45m, N/C 15+ In the third Scottish selection, characters stray from normality in ways both small and large. Let it all hang out, sweep the old order away, resistance may be futile, but it’s beautiful. Ian Waugh’s As He Lay Falling comes home after an impressive international festival run, whilst Ronald Forbes’ Only Make Believe and Scott Willis’ Pigeon are brand new. Also featuring films by Peter Mackie Burns, Claire Lamond and the mysterious Kristof Babaski. p`lqqfpe `ljmbqfqflk QW plrij^qbp CCA THEATRE Sunday 15 March (15.15) 1h45m, N/C 15+ For all our flaws and quirks, love blooms in the final Scottish programme. New connections are tentatively made whilst others are severed once and for all. One couple enjoys a wee night in, and another goes out shooting. Kate Burton’s BB captures the awkwardness of first attractions; Rory Stewart’s Wyld explores the pressing need for change. Also featuring the new film by GSFF14 Scottish Short Film Award winner Ewan Stewart, What Happens After Six. _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc R fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk NW ebim jb GFT CINEMA 3 Wednesday 11 March (18.30) Sunday 15 March (13.15) 1h45m, N/C 15+ In an irrational world, we need the support of others to give our lives shape and meaning. The attempt to impose order on chaos will never succeed – we can either paper over the cracks or embrace the constant change, reaching out and helping those around us. This programme features the latest work by Caroline Sascha Cogez, the subject of our 2013 retrospective, alongside acclaimed Hungarian animation Symphony No 42, and Swedish black comedy Lifestyle. fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk OW qelpb ibcq _befka GFT CINEMA 3 Wednesday 11 March (20.45) Sunday 15 March (15.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ A programme exploring the five stages of grief – denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance; not as five distinct experiences to be worked through in a tidy linear progression, but as competing, conflicting, reoccurring emotions. A haunting, emotive selection. The programme includes award-winning Argentinian animation Father, Polish/Armenian documentary-style drama Milky Brother and Missing by American-Ugandan actor/director/photographer Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine. fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk PW prd^o C pmf`b GFT CINEMA 3 Thursday 12 March (13.15) Friday 13 March (18.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ A life-sized dolls house burns to the ground in the opening film of this programme, and the films that follow variously celebrate and reject conventions of young womanhood, innocence and sisterhood. From the ethics of exploitation in the name of art, to misguided parenting and teenage solidarity, this is a sharp, self-reflexive and often hilarious selection of films. Featuring brand new works by Adrian Sitaru (GSFF11 award winner) and Jennifer Reeder. fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk QW ^ gl_ tbii alkb GFT CINEMA 3 Thursday 12 March (15.30) Friday 13 March (20.45) 1h45m, N/C 15+ Jobsworths, layabouts and dreamers – no one takes pride in their work anymore. A pedantic swimming pool attendant experiences the shift from hell, whilst a wantonly cruel pet shop manager gets what’s coming to him. Given a brand new planet to populate in Greek/Georgian film Kepler, humans prove just as vain and incompetent as they are on Earth, whilst in the stunning Cuban drama Twilight a reluctant clown performing in the sticks awaits the promise of a better acting gig in the city. S di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk RW jlqflk pf`hkbpp GFT CINEMA 3 Thursday 12 March (18.30) Saturday 14 March (13.15) 1h45m, N/C 15+ We live in a restless world. Those who strike out for a better life, or who are chased from their homes, as often as not end their journey in disappointment, stasis or tragedy. For some, a short trip across town is an epic voyage, whilst others think nothing of cross-border bargain hunting. This programme charts such journeys, from devastation off the coast of Lampedusa, via limbo in Greece, to Nordic squabbles and an exhaustive super-cut of New York City on the move. fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk SW qolr_ib _obtfkd GFT CINEMA 3 Thursday 12 March (20.45) Saturday 14 March (15.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ Bad behaviour from kids is one thing, but the grownups should know better. Some will never learn, others are trying to make amends, others still are damned whatever they do. All fun and games, until it isn’t. Featuring Earth Over Wind, the latest work from Glasgow’s own Joern Utkilen, this time working in his native Norway, plus The Noise, a cutting edge Iranian study of paranoia, surveillance and judgemental neighbours and Parking, a masterful drama from Bulgaria. fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk TW m^pq efpqlof` GFT CINEMA 3 Friday 13 March (13.15) Saturday 14 March (18.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ The past is not another country, we can never truly leave it behind. A programme of five films which bring repressed memories both personal and collective bubbling to the surface, even in the act of living fully in the present. Visualising historical forces in very different ways, the films take us from Ramallah seen through the eyes of a gay Lebanese couple, to Taiwan under Dutch rule, the former East Germany, and finally to the heady spiritual fervour of a gospel church in Florida. fkqbok^qflk^i `ljmbqfqflk UW cfbia pqrafbp GFT CINEMA 3 Friday 13 March (15.30) Saturday 14 March (20.45) 1h45m, N/C 15 The final international competition programme features five films in which characters are presented as scientific case studies, observed in the field, thrust into a baffling new world with detached curiosity. Some remain blissfully unaware of their fate, others rebel against it, like the homeless victims of the Fukushima disaster documented in Radioactive, who cast off typical Japanese stoicism to battle civic incompetence. Also featuring BAFTA-nominated Scottish animation Monkey Love Experiments and the latest work from the brilliant Don Hertzfeldt, World of Tomorrow. _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc T U di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i ``^ qeb^qob ``^ `fkbj^ dcq `fkbj^ P cofa^v NP j^o`e qeb ^oq p`elli ``^ qeb^qob ``^ `fkbj^ dcq `fkbj^ P 10 10 qeropa^v NO j^o`e qeb _ofdd^fq dcq `fkbj^ P 10 tbakbpa^v NN j^o`e 12 12 12 11.00 – 13.00 Duane Hopkins In Conversation 11 11.00 – 12.15 Short Stuff 11 11 14 14 14 13.30 – 15.00 Panel: What Next? 13.15 – 15.00 International 7 Past Historic 13 13.15 – 15.00 International 3 Sugar & Spice 13 13 15 15 15 16 16 15.30 – 17.15 Kevin B Lee Workshop 15.30 – 17.15 International 8 Field Studies 16 15.30 – 17.15 International 4 A Job Well Done di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i OMNR 17 17 17 19 20 20 20 19.30 – 21.15 Scottish 2 Dark Days 21 22 22 22 21.30 – 23.00 Daniel Wolfe Masterclass 20.45 – 22.30 International 4 A Job Well Done 21 21.15 – 23.00 Scottish 1 Parenthood 21.00 – 22.30 Jennifer Reeder 20.45 – 22.30 International 6 Trouble Brewing 21 21.00 – 23.00 Vertical Cinema Those Left Behind 20.45 – 22.30 International 2 19.30 – 21.15 Anatomy of a Short Film Programme 18.30 – 20.15 International 3 Sugar & Spice 19 18.30 – 20.00 The Art School/ Big Screen: 00:01:00 19.15 – 20.45 The Skinny Short Film Award 19.00 – 20.45 Focus on Ukraine 1 18.30 – 20.15 International 5 Motion Sickness 19 18.30 – 20.15 International 1 Help Me 17.30 – 19.00 The Short Road to Features 18 18 18 23 23 23 _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc V ``^ `ir_ollj ``^ qeb^qob ``^ `fkbj^ dcq `fkbj^ O dcq `fkbj^ P prka^v NR j^o`e ``^ qboo^`b _^o qeb dirb c^`qlov ``^ qeb^qob ``^ `fkbj^ dcq `fkbj^ P 10 10 p^qroa^v NQ j^o`e 12 13 11 11.30 – 12.45 Family Shorts 12 14 14 13.15 – 15.00 International 5 Motion Sickness 13.00 – 15.00 Filming The List 13.00 – 15.00 Let Glasgow Flourish 2 13.15 – 15.00 International 1 Help Me 13 10.30 – 18.00 Symposium: Short Film (and) Criticism 11 16 15.30 – 17.15 International 6 Trouble Brewing 15 15.15 – 17.00 Scottish 4 Soulmates 15.30 – 17.15 Focus on Ukraine 2 Those Left Behind 15.30 – 17.15 International 2 16 15.15 – 17.00 Let Glasgow Flourish 1 15 di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i OMNR 17 17 17.30 – 19.30 Meet the Filmmakers 17.30 – 19.00 12th Player Jennifer Reeder 18.00 – 19.30 18 19 20 19 20 21 22 20.30 – 22.30 Award Winners 21 22 21.15 – 23.00 Short Com with Greg Hemphill 20.45 – 22.30 International 8 Field Studies 20.30 – 02.00 Strange Electricity 19.30 – 21.00 A Wall is A Screen 19.15 – 21.00 Scottish 3 Off the Path 18.30 – 20.15 International 7 Past Historic 17.30 – 19.00 Luminous Latitude 18 23 23 sboqf`^i `fkbj^ THE BRIGGAIT Wednesday 11 March (Doors 20.30, event starts 21.00) 2h, N/C 15+ We open the festival in spectacular style with a monumental and mesmerising audio-visual experience: ten new works by internationally renowned experimental filmmakers, projected vertically on 35 mm celluloid with a custom-built projector in vertical cinemascope. A unique blend of abstract cinema, structural experiments, found footage remixes, chemical film explorations and live laser action, Vertical Cinema represents a provocation to expand the cinematic image onto a new axis. Prepare to have your mind well and truly blown! Tickets £8. Please note that The Briggait is a covered outdoor space – dress warmly! pqo^kdb bib`qof`fqv THE GLUE FACTORY Saturday 14 March (Doors for screening 20.00, starts 20.30. Doors for party 21.30, first act starts 22.00) 5h30, 18+ Shot in 16mm, Sähkö the Movie documents Finnish ultra-minimalist techno label Sähkö Recordings in its mid-90s prime. It was directed by label chief Jimi Tenor, and features Tenor himself, Mika Vainio aka Ø, Pan(a)sonic, Hertsi, and even Glasgow’s own Keith McIvor aka JD Twitch. Jimi and Twitch will present a twentieth anniversary screening, followed by live sets by Jimi Tenor and Golden Teacher, and DJ sets by JD Twitch and Bake. Screening and party £12 (very limited capacity). Party only £8. gbkkfcbo obbabo CCA CINEMA Thursday 12 March (21.00) Sunday 15 March (18.00 – repeat screening) 1h30m, N/C 15+ Midwestern filmmaker and artist Jennifer Reeder’s most recent film A Million Miles Away was the undisputed hit of the short film circuit in 2014. Reeder channels Miranda July and David Lynch in her bittersweet tale of an insecure supply teacher and a choir of savvy schoolgirls. To accompany the first UK screening of her new film Blood Below The Skin (International Competition 3), GSFF presents A Million Miles Away and three previous works, the Forevering Trilogy. a^kfbi tlicb jrpf` sfabl j^pqbo`i^pp CCA THEATRE Friday 13 March (21.30) 1h30m Genius is an overused word, but Daniel Wolfe’s videos for Chase & Status’ Blind Faith, Paolo Nutini’s Iron Sky, The Shoes’ Time to Dance and Plan B’s The Defamation of Strickland Banks come close. Each one a technically brilliant piece of visual storytelling, they elevate the songs to new emotional levels without overwhelming them. Don’t miss this chance to hear Daniel show and talk about his promo work, as well as his recent move into feature direction with the critically acclaimed Catch Me Daddy (GFF2015). NM di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i cl`rp lk rho^fkb PROGRAMME 1: BABYLON ‘13 CCA Cinema, Thursday 12 March (19.00) PROGRAMME 2: CRY, BUT SHOOT! CCA Cinema, Sunday 15 March (15.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ Lviv International Short Film Festival Wiz-Art presents two specially curated programmes of new work from Ukraine. The first programme showcases the work of Babylon ’13, a collective making web-docs in response to current events, and founded on the idea that documentary can change people’s views on the reality around them. The second programme takes its title from the words of Oleksandr Dovzhenko, Ukraine’s most famous filmmaker, and showcases a wide range of new fiction produced in the country. ibq di^pdlt cilrofpe PROGRAMME 1: BEST LAID SCHEMES CCA Cinema, Saturday 14 March (15.15) PROGRAMME 2: THE GAME’S A BOGEY GFT Cinema 2, Sunday 15 March (13.00) 1h45m / 2h, N/C 15+ In 1985, a collective of young unemployed people living in Cranhill produced Clyde Film, a poetic history of the people of Glasgow told only in music and images, and set against scenes of failed regeneration. To mark the 30th anniversary of this quietly raging masterpiece, GSFF has curated two programmes exploring the city’s cycle of renewal. The first programme features archive documentaries from the 1940s onwards, whilst the second programme shows the varying responses of local communities to the changes thrust upon them. ^ t^ii fp ^ p`obbk CCA TERRACE BAR (OUTSIDE) Saturday 14 March (19.30) 1h30m, N/C 15+ Both guided city tour and short film night, Hamburg collective A Wall Is A Screen invites you to see Glasgow in a way you’ve never previously experienced the city. This guerrilla mobile screening takes over neglected spaces, familiar buildings and commercial facades for ten minutes of lovingly curated short film before moving on to the next location – the ultimate pop-up cinema! Free unticketed event: meet outside CCA Terrace Bar, Scott Street, prepared for March weather. peloq `lj tfqe dobd ebjmefii CCA THEATRE Saturday 14 March (21.15) 1h45m, N/C 15+ Short Com is delighted to make its return to Glasgow Short Film Festival for 2015. Short Com is a regular showcase of the finest independent comic shorts around, by new comedic filmmaking talent, chosen from open submissions. Showcasing the best films from its tour of 2014, this screening will be hosted by obscure Scots-Canadian performance artist Gregor Hemphill. Short Com supports the mental health charities CALM and SAMH and will be collecting voluntary donations after the screening. _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc NN irjfklrp i^qfqrabW ^oqfpqpÛ cfij qlrofkd moldo^jjb CCA CINEMA Saturday 14 March (17.30) 1h30m, N/C 15+ Twelve short films inviting broad questions around how a sense of place may act as a grounding for our individual and collective creative identity. Highlighting the rich diversity of contemporary Scottish experimental film practice, these filmmakers explore a range of landscapes, techniques, themes and attitudes; from poetic lyricism, through representation and abstraction, to political appropriation. Is there, perhaps, a distinctive diversity emerging from this very place? Luminous Latitude is an Alchemy Film & Arts project and is supported by The Craignish Trust. NOqe mi^vbo CCA THEATRE Sunday 15 March (17.30) 1h30m, N/C 15+ Turning the camera away from the pitch, this specially curated programme celebrates any football team’s greatest asset: the fans. Ranging from animation to artists’ moving image, from documentary to fiction, films made about and by the most obsessive of devotees take us on a near transcendental journey, from the border between Austria and Germany to Maradona’s infamous goal against England in Mexico 1986. Expect laughs, chanting, the odd punch thrown and maybe a wee bit of fitba. peloq pqrccW m^obkq C _^_v p`obbkfkd CCA CINEMA Thursday 12 March (11.00) 1h15m, N/C 12+ The ever-popular Short Stuff returns for an hour and a bit of highlights from across the GSFF15 programme, specially chosen for parents and babies. The selection will remain a secret until the curtains open, but we guarantee entertaining and thought-provoking drama, documentary and animation from around the world. No extreme content or sudden loud noises, and the lights will remain on low to allow easy movement during the screening. Babies must be 18 months or younger (and go free, obviously!) c^jfiv peloqp CCA THEATRE Sunday 15 March (11.30) 1h15m, N/C 5+ Forget TV cartoons. Once again our annual family programme brings you the most exciting new animation from around the world, up on the big screen. By turns daft, silly, sad, spooky and uplifting, this programme will showcase a wide range of stunning animation techniques and take you on journeys you never thought possible. Feel free to turn up in your jammies, wrapped up in a duvet. Sunday mornings couldn’t be more cosy! One ticket admits one adult and one child. NO di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i qeb ^oq p`elli C _fd p`obbk mobpbkqW MMWMNWMM THE ART SCHOOL Thursday 12 March (18.30) 1h30m, N/C 15+ There are movements over at The Art School... a great mass of students gather together to show off their one-minute transitions! The Art School and Big Screen, GSA's film society, invite you to step into the chrysalis of the Assembly Hall and journey with us through a non-stop barrage of student-made ultra-shorts. Help us choose the favourites to be shown at the GSFF15 Award Winners screening on Sunday 15th of March. See you there caterpillars! Free entry, no ticket required qeb phfkkv peloq cfij ^t^oa CCA THEATRE Thursday 12 March (19.15) 1h30m, N/C 15+ Last year, The Skinny launched a competition to find the best new micro-budget short film made in Scotland. The winning entry was Rory Alexander Stewart’s genre-hopping mockumentary Good Girl. We’re delighted to present the debut screening of Misery Guts, the film Rory made with his prize money courtesy of partners Innis & Gunn, alongside Good Girl, as well as some of the best submissions we received, ranging from a meta sex comedy to a claustrophobic sci-fi fantasy. Free entry, tickets available on the day from CCA box office. cfijfkd qeb ifpq CCA CINEMA Sunday 15 March (13.00) 2h, N/C 15+ In 2013, theatre company Stellar Quines commissioned BAFTA-winning film director Morag McKinnon to work alongside stage director Muriel Romanes to produce a cinema version of their award-winning Edinburgh Festival Fringe production The List. Their aim was to create a filmed experience that didn’t compromise the live-ness and intimacy of the actor’s relationship with an audience. This screening of the film will be followed by a discussion between theatre- and filmmakers about the opportunities for collaboration between these two art forms. qeb peloq ol^a ql cb^qrobp CCA CINEMA Friday 13 March (17.30) 1h30m, N/C 15+ Short films are often an important stepping stone to feature filmmaking. The team behind Scottish Film Talent Network present some of their favourite ‘career-making’ shorts, followed by a discussion on what made them stand out. Supported by Creative Scotland and Creative Skillset, and in partnership with the BFI Net.Work, SFTN was established to nurture new and emerging filmmakers across Scotland. This new initiative aims to provide a ladder of progression from shorts to first feature. www.scottishfilmtalent.com Free entry, tickets available on the day from CCA box office. _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc NP pvjmlpfrjW peloq cfij E^kaF `ofqf`fpj CCA THEATRE Saturday 14 March (10.30) 7h30m A series of discussions considering film criticism in the context of short film: critical writing on short film, short film curation as criticism, and short filmmaking as criticism. The symposium is presented by Glasgow Short Film Festival and University of Glasgow School of Culture & Creative Arts, in association with University of Edinburgh: MSc Film, Exhibition & Curation and Scottish Media and Communications Association. Free entry. For information on speakers and to register a place, go to www.glasgowfilm.org/gsff. ^k^qljv lc ^ peloq cfij moldo^jjb CCA CINEMA Friday 13 March (19.30) 1h45m, N/C 15+ How do short film programmes shape the films they contain? Kickstarting the discussion on short film curation as criticism in Saturday’s symposium, students of Film, Exhibition and Curation at the University of Edinburgh present a programme of short films alongside their analysis of every curatorial decision, considering their reasons for both selection and rejection. This dissection of curatorial creative processes aims to lay bare implications of criticism, contextualization and taste-making in short film curation. ar^kb elmhfkp fk `lksbop^qflkW afob`qfkd ^`qlop CCA THEATRE Friday 13 March (11.00) 2h Having developed a distinctive voice in two multi-award winning shorts, Field (2001) and Love Me or Leave Me Alone (2003), Duane Hopkins went on to make two equally uncompromising and acclaimed features, Better Things (2008) and Bypass (2014). He has coaxed extraordinarily honest performances out of first time or untrained actors. Don’t miss this in-depth conversation in which Duane will discuss every aspect of directing actors and non-actors, from casting and rehearsing to shooting and editing performance. hbsfk _ ibbW abphqlm al`rjbkq^ov CCA THEATRE Friday 13 March (15.30) 1h45m Kevin B Lee is a master of the online video essay, with over 200 works to his name. Recently he and others at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago have developed a form of filmmaking called Desktop Documentary, which treats the computer screen as both a camera lens and a canvas. Desktop documentary seeks to both depict and question the ways we explore the world through the computer screen. Kevin will present his fresh approach to capturing life’s reality in this vital workshop. NQ di^pdlt peloq cfij cbpqfs^i ^kf g^j CITIZENM Kick-off Friday 13 March (18.30) All weekend, N/C 15+ The Ani Jam is a 48-hour animation competition held over a whirlwind weekend in which animators and creatives are invited to produce an animated film. The concept is easy; teams between 2 and 10 people create an animated film between 30-90 seconds long, based around a particular theme. 48 hours to produce an animation from start to finish? Seems ridiculous? Come join us and find out! Entry for a team of up to 10 is £75. To register your team, go to www.theanijam.com. rtp `ob^qfsb jbaf^ ^`^abjv j^ moldo^jjb i^rk`e ^ka pvjmlpfrjW `ob^qfsfqv ^ka cloj FILM CITY Thursday 12 March (09.30) 7h30 The path from short to feature is a road most filmmakers eventually take. But how do you make the transition from capturing a short fragment of life to developing character and narrative over ninety minutes? In this one-day symposium filmmakers Duane Hopkins and Shalimar Preuss, documentarians Nick Higgins and Peter Snowdon, and producer Paul Welsh discuss their experience of working across shorts and features. Free entry. For more information or to register please go to www.uws.ac.uk/schools/school-of-media-culture-and-society/conferences/ m^kbiW te^q kbuq\ CCA THEATRE Friday 13 March (13.30) 1h30m So you’ve made a short. Good work. Now what? There’s no clear path to success (whether that’s untold riches, critical acclaim or just the chance to make another one). This panel brings together several industry experts to present the various opportunities for short filmmakers and help you decide what next step is best for you and your film: festival screenings, online distribution, sales, broadcast and/or further commissions. A rare opportunity to corner the powerbrokers! jbbq qeb cfijj^hbop CCA CLUBROOM Sunday 15 March (17.30) 2h All Scottish and International competition screenings will include brief Q&As with the filmmakers attending. However, once all the competition programmes have screened, but before the winners are announced, here’s your chance to participate in an informal discussion session with all the international filmmakers attending, led by festival director Matt Lloyd. Free entry, no ticket required, and there may even be a free drink or two on offer. _rv qf`hbqp lkifkb ^q tttKdi^pdltcfijKlodLdpcc NR PROUD SPONSOR OF GSFF SCOTTISH SHORT FILM AWARD 2015 www.motherindia.co.uk 0141 221 1663
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