SXSW | Filmmaker Magazine https://filmmakermagazine.com Publication with a focus on independent film, offering articles, links, and resources. Thu, 27 Jul 2023 19:58:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 “Klee Wanted to Destroy the Convention of Angels in Their Historic Tradition”: Ken August Meyer on His SXSW Doc about Art and Illness, Angel Applicant https://filmmakermagazine.com/120268-ken-august-meyer-angel-applicant/ Mon, 13 Mar 2023 22:14:21 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120268

There’s the concept of art as therapy, and then there’s the concept of a specific artist as a therapist, which is how debuting filmmaker Ken August Meyer introduces the Swiss-German painter Paul Klee at the start of his Angel Applicant, premiering today in the SXSW Documentary Feature Competition. At the beginning of the 21st century, Meyer, an art director at Wieden+Kennedy, is struck by systemic scleroderma, a life-threatening autoimmune disease that causes scarring and tightening of the skin and which can damage internal organs. As he embarks on a treatment path, Meyer finds solace as well as a kind of […]

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“…The Costs of Turning Yourself from a Three-Dimensional Person into a Two-Dimensional Brand”: Miranda Yousef on Her SXSW-Premiering doc Art for Everybody https://filmmakermagazine.com/120240-interview-miranda-yousef-art-for-everybody-thomas-kinkade-sxsw/ Mon, 13 Mar 2023 17:30:35 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120240

One of the most surprising revelations about the painter (and multimillion-dollar mass marketer) Thomas Kinkade, “the most successful artist of his time” according to the synopsis for Miranda Yousef’s SXSW-premiering doc Art for Everybody, is not that he was, well, “the most successful artist of his time.” Nor that after his death a decade ago from a drug and alcohol overdose his family discovered a secret trove of rather dark and sometimes disturbing work, images at complete odds with the sugary sweet depictions of small-town life that once graced the walls of the Thomas Kinkade Signature Gallery franchises, a ubiquitous presence […]

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“How Do You Talk About It as a Murder When You Think It’s an Accident?” Citizen Sleuth Director Chris Kasick on His SXSW-Premiering Mile Marker 181 Doc https://filmmakermagazine.com/120250-citizen-sleuth-mile-marker-181/ Sun, 12 Mar 2023 19:23:02 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120250

In the nine years since Serial, the “true crime podcaster” has become, variously, a career goal, sociological type and, in TV shows like Only Murders in the Building, object of satire. In Citizen Sleuth, world premiering in SXSW’s Documentary Spotlight section, debuting director Chris Kasick considers his voluble, no-filter subject—Emily Nestor of the Mile Marker 181 podcast—from all of these angles while also producing a work that is something of a moral reckoning for the popular audio genre. In 2011, Jaleayah Davis, a 20-year old Ohio woman, died in a horrible drunk-driving accident, her head severed from her body. Or […]

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“I Like the Idea of Comedy in an Uninhabitable Place”: Director Calvin Lee Reeder on His SXSW-Premiering TV Pilot, Harbor Island https://filmmakermagazine.com/120122-calvin-lee-reeder-harbor-island/ Sun, 12 Mar 2023 16:12:32 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120122

“Like an Abel Ferrara Jr., [Calvin Lee] Reeder meshes thought and design with genre storylines, like a Euro-filmmaker making ’70s drive-in films,” wrote Mike Plante in his 2007 25 New Face profile of the Portland, Ore.-born filmmaker. Sixteen-years later, the alt-horror auteur is still moving between the border spaces of various horror and science-fiction sub-genres, with his newest work — the SXSW-premiering independent TV pilot Harbor Island — being one of the most existentially offbeat yet. The festival’s program book provides the narrative gist but not the work’s extremely odd affect, which is something like watching Rupert Pupkin act in […]

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“The Inspiration To Donate a Kidney Was Not a ‘Project’ To Begin With”: Penny Lane on Confessions of a Good Samaritan https://filmmakermagazine.com/120169-interview-penny-lane-confessions-of-a-good-samaritan-sxsw-2023/ Fri, 10 Mar 2023 20:00:34 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=120169

The drive to donate a kidney to a stranger is not a desire I—nor the majority of the population, for that matter—can relate to. (But then again I’ve personally no great love for humanity in general, as arguably the planet would be far better off had we gone the way of the dinosaurs. And luckily for Mother Earth, we still may!) Which puts me at philosophical odds with veteran filmmaker (and main protagonist) Penny Lane, whose latest doc Confessions of a Good Samaritan is a deep dive into the science as well as ethical implications behind altruistic donation. It’s also a […]

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“… A Means of Creating a Fulfilling Life, Rather Than Just About Creating a Film”: Morrisa Maltz on Her Lily Gladstone-Starring The Unknown Country https://filmmakermagazine.com/113746-morrisa-maltz-the-unknown-country/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/113746-morrisa-maltz-the-unknown-country/#respond Mon, 27 Jun 2022 19:58:43 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=113746

This interview with the director of the recommended The Unknown Country was originally posted during the 2022 SXSW Film Festival and is being reposted today as the film opens in New York, Los Angeles and other markets via Music Box Films. — Editor From the plains of the Dakotas to the Mexican-American border, landscape — seen through rain-streaked windshields at night, from overhead drone shots, and from the point-of-view of a single woman moving across a country that’s both reassuring and suddenly alien — is both subject and setting in The Unknown Country, the debut dramatic feature from artist and […]

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Ambition in Filmmaking, Mia Goth’s Dual Role and His Sirkian A24 Prequel: Ti West on His SXSW-Premiering X https://filmmakermagazine.com/113718-ambition-in-filmmaking-mia-goths-dual-role-and-his-sirkian-a24-prequel-ti-west-on-his-sxsw-premiering-x/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/113718-ambition-in-filmmaking-mia-goths-dual-role-and-his-sirkian-a24-prequel-ti-west-on-his-sxsw-premiering-x/#respond Mon, 14 Mar 2022 20:07:16 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=113718

After 2016’s Western, In the Valley of Violence, and several years directing episodic TV, Ti West (The House of the Devil, The Inkeepers, The Sacrament) makes a very welcome return to the world of feature horror with X, a ’70s-set picture in which the sort of ambition that has characterized West’s impressive filmography is both evident on screen as well as the subtext driving the film’s characters. The set-up: a ragtag group of filmmakers ensconce themselves in a rented barn outside a foreboding farmhouse straight out of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre to make a porno feature, The Farmer’s Daughter. Mia […]

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Five Questions for Drea Cooper and Zachary Canepari About Their SXSW-Premiering Documentary, Diamond Hands: The Legend of WallStreetBets https://filmmakermagazine.com/113709-diamond-hands-the-legend-of-wallstreetbets/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/113709-diamond-hands-the-legend-of-wallstreetbets/#respond Sun, 13 Mar 2022 18:52:29 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=113709

As more and more human activity — personal, social, economic, political — happens online, a challenge is posed to practitioners of that legacy art form, the feature film. To wit: how to tell an 80-minute-plus story whose symbolic meanings were created in part by interactions and juxtapositions occurring in virtual spaces, a story that’s possibly inseparable from a rich visual culture that is most accurately parsed in portrait mode and not in a theater or on a flat screen? Providing one answer are filmmakers Drea Cooper and Zackary Canepari, whose latest feature documentary, the SXSW-premiering Diamond Hands: The Legend of […]

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“It’s About the Emotion, the Performance, the Rhythm and the Space in Between the Words”: Rosa Ruth Boesten on Her SXSW-Debuting doc Master of Light https://filmmakermagazine.com/113683-its-about-the-emotion-the-performance-the-rhythm-and-the-space-in-between-the-words-rosa-ruth-boesten-on-her-sxsw-debuting-doc-master-of-light/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/113683-its-about-the-emotion-the-performance-the-rhythm-and-the-space-in-between-the-words-rosa-ruth-boesten-on-her-sxsw-debuting-doc-master-of-light/#respond Sat, 12 Mar 2022 18:07:55 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=113683

A stunning work of cinematic nonfiction, Rosa Ruth Boesten’s Master of Light follows the classical painter George Anthony Morton, a fan of Rembrandt who conjures exquisite portraits of his own family members in the style of the Old Masters. Never formally trained, Morton nonetheless managed to land a spot at the New York branch of The Florence Academy of Art, eventually going on to study in Europe and win awards abroad. Which would be a remarkable feat for any American, let alone a Black man from Kansas City who spent a decade behind bars for dealing drugs. But likewise remarkable […]

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Building a Microbudget Ghost Story Around an AirBnB Location: Director Pete Ohs and Cast on the SXSW-Premiering Jethica https://filmmakermagazine.com/113648-pete-ohs-jethica/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/113648-pete-ohs-jethica/#respond Fri, 11 Mar 2022 20:04:29 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=113648

Two women, each fleeing unspecified trauma, holed up in an aluminum-sided mobile home in the middle of a desolate patch of New Mexico flatlands is an apt set-up for a microbudget horror film, but the pleasures and originality of Pete Ohs SXSW-premiering Jethica are in the ways in which it avoids all the more obvious narrative pathways it might have taken. (Indeed, it’s an exemplar of George Saunders’s dictum of “ritual banality avoidance” — rejecting the “crappo version” of a story.) There are no screams or shaky-cam chases, no woman-in-jeopardy jump scares. Instead, Ohs has worked with his actors to […]

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“There Were No Easy Answers to My Questions”: Iliana Sosa on Her SXSW-Debuting Doc What We Leave Behind https://filmmakermagazine.com/113598-iliana-sosa-what-we-leave-behind/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/113598-iliana-sosa-what-we-leave-behind/#respond Fri, 11 Mar 2022 16:00:37 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=113598

Iliana Sosa’s What We Leave Behind is an astonishingly intimate labor of love. The film emerged from Sosa’s desire to document her grandfather Julián, a proudly hardworking man who first left his native Mexico back in the early 1940s to join the US government’s Bracero program, which brought in farm workers to remedy the WWII labor shortage. After his daughters, including the filmmaker’s mom, moved permanently to the States, the widowed Julián spent the next two decades traveling solo from Durango to visit them in the southwest. But as he now nears his nonagenarian years the monthly bus trip becomes […]

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“Flying Blind”: Writer/Director Caleb Johnson On the Production, “SXSW Screening” and Future of His Feature The Carnivores https://filmmakermagazine.com/109452-flying-blind-writer-director-caleb-johnson-on-the-production-sxsw-screening-and-future-of-his-feature-the-carnivore/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/109452-flying-blind-writer-director-caleb-johnson-on-the-production-sxsw-screening-and-future-of-his-feature-the-carnivore/#respond Thu, 26 Mar 2020 23:24:57 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=109452

In light of SXSW’s cancellation, a private “homespun” screening of the only local production in the festival’s narrative line up, Caleb Johnson’s The Carnivores, was arranged at its cinematographer’s (Adam J. Minnick) Austin residence on the night it was scheduled to premiere. The event hoped to encapsulate the spirit of the festival all at once. Upon entrance, invited press, programmers and audience got their photo taken on a polaroid against a classic yellow backdrop and laurels. That polaroid fit snug inside an imitation festival badge. After attendees stuffed themselves with Tacodeli they dragged over the red carpet to their seats […]

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Death of a Moment: A Muslim Filmmaker at SXSW https://filmmakermagazine.com/109386-death-of-a-moment-a-muslim-filmmaker-at-sxsw/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/109386-death-of-a-moment-a-muslim-filmmaker-at-sxsw/#respond Tue, 17 Mar 2020 18:57:01 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=109386

For the first time in its 34-year history, the SXSW Film Festival got cancelled amid coronavirus fears. For an indie filmmaker like me, I’ll Meet You There – Bismil, which was one of only ten films out of thousands to be selected in the narrative competition, was the film of my life; that personal story I was dying to tell, as best as I could, with as little as I had. The film that took a decade to decide to really shoot. The film that faced hundreds of rejections before one yes. Being in competition at a world-renowned festival like SXSW is not […]

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“… The Smallest Budget I Have Worked With, and Yet It Felt the Most Ample”: Five Questions for Hilary Brougher About Her SXSW-Premiering South Mountain https://filmmakermagazine.com/107115-the-smallest-budget-i-have-worked-with-and-yet-it-felt-the-most-ample-five-questions-for-hilary-brougher-about-her-sxsw-premiering-south-mountain/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/107115-the-smallest-budget-i-have-worked-with-and-yet-it-felt-the-most-ample-five-questions-for-hilary-brougher-about-her-sxsw-premiering-south-mountain/#respond Mon, 11 Mar 2019 14:00:01 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=107115

A welcome sight on the SXSW feature list is a new film from Hilary Brougher, who has been making inventive, emotionally acute independent film across three decades now, always working in some degree of low to ultra-low budget. Her debut, Sticky Fingers of Time, was lo-fi sci-fi with a time-travel hook that might remind you of Looper but with a feminist slant. Stephanie Daley, starring Tilda Swinton and Amber Tamblyn, followed in 2006, a mystery both legal and existential about an unwanted pregnancy. And now there’s South Mountain, which finds Brougher working with her smallest budget yet but with a […]

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“The Shoot was Undoubtedly ‘A Poor Man’s Revenant‘”: DP Eric Treml on The Legacy of a Whitetail Deer Hunter at SXSW 2018 https://filmmakermagazine.com/105045-the-shoot-was-undoubtedly-a-poor-mans-revenant-dp-eric-treml-on-the-legacy-of-a-whitetail-deer-hunter-at-sxsw-2018/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/105045-the-shoot-was-undoubtedly-a-poor-mans-revenant-dp-eric-treml-on-the-legacy-of-a-whitetail-deer-hunter-at-sxsw-2018/#respond Tue, 20 Mar 2018 14:33:43 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=105045

The Movie: The Legacy of a Whitetail Deer Hunter The Plot: Accompanied by his trusty cameraman (Danny McBride), the recently divorced host of a lo-fi hunting show (James Brolin) takes his son into the wilds of North Carolina to bag his first deer on camera. The Interviewee: Cinematographer Eric Treml. He previously collaborated with Whitetail director Jody Hill (Observe and Report, Eastbound & Down) on HBO’s Vice Principals. Filmmaker: Tell me a little bit about your background in production. You have early credits on some big movies as part of the underwater camera team. Treml: When I first moved to […]

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Mélanie Laurent on Galveston, Affordable Song Rights and Directors (Not) Working with Actors at SXSW 2018 https://filmmakermagazine.com/105012-melanie-laurent-on-galveston-affordable-song-rights-and-directors-not-working-with-actors-at-sxsw-2018/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/105012-melanie-laurent-on-galveston-affordable-song-rights-and-directors-not-working-with-actors-at-sxsw-2018/#respond Wed, 14 Mar 2018 19:29:11 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=105012

The movie: Galveston The Plot: On the run from a New Orleans mobster (Beau Bridges), a dying hit man (Ben Foster) and a sex worker (Elle Fanning) hit the road for the titular location. Based on the novel by True Detective author Nic Pizzolatto. The Interviewee: Writer/director Mélanie Laurent. This is the French filmmaker’s first English-language feature as director. As an actress, she has appeared in Inglorious Bastards, Beginners and By the Sea. Filmmaker: There’s an interesting quote from you in the press notes that says something like “This is a story that maybe wasn’t meant for me, but I […]

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At SXSW, Sundance Shares Columbus Distribution Figures and Offers DIY Distribution Tips https://filmmakermagazine.com/105010-at-sxsw-sundance-shares-columbus-distribution-figures-and-offers-diy-distribution-tips/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/105010-at-sxsw-sundance-shares-columbus-distribution-figures-and-offers-diy-distribution-tips/#respond Wed, 14 Mar 2018 19:15:47 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=105010

Sundance Institute’s Creative Distribution Initiative released today a case study for one of its inaugural films that premiered at Sundance last year: Columbus, from :: kogonada, who appeared on Filmmaker’s 25 New Faces of Independent Film list. Opening to strong critical acclaim and grossing over $1 million at the U.S. box office, the film is centered around a Korean-born man who finds himself stuck in Columbus, Indiana, where his father is in a coma. In two weeks, an additional case study for Jennifer Brea’s Oscar short-listed doc Unrest will be released. Established in May 2017, the initiative is aimed at […]

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A Visual Portrait of a Profoundly Internal Person: Finlay Pretsell on His Original Take on the Cycling Doc, Time Trial https://filmmakermagazine.com/104886-a-visual-portrait-of-a-profoundly-internal-person-finlay-pretsell-on-his-original-take-on-the-cycling-doc-time-trial/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/104886-a-visual-portrait-of-a-profoundly-internal-person-finlay-pretsell-on-his-original-take-on-the-cycling-doc-time-trial/#respond Sat, 10 Mar 2018 01:34:43 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=104886

Hearing the phrase “a decade in the making” is not that unusual in feature documentary circles, particularly for those stories that, on the surface, look fairly simple and straightforward, yet somehow beg to be told on a big screen. That long duration, though oftentimes frustrating, lends itself to finding the more peripheral, ephemeral elements around the main story. So many documentaries about athletes are reliant upon heavy use of archival footage and sit-down interviews with everyone whoever knew the person, with family members, friends, fellow athletes and coaches all weighing in to form a portrait of the protagonist as champion, […]

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25 Films and Events We’re Looking Forward to at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival https://filmmakermagazine.com/104907-25-films-and-events-were-looking-forward-to-at-the-2018-sxsw-film-festival/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/104907-25-films-and-events-were-looking-forward-to-at-the-2018-sxsw-film-festival/#respond Thu, 08 Mar 2018 17:11:43 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=104907

SXSW, with its tens of thousands of tech enthusiasts and thousands of filmmakers and film fans, kicks off tomorrow with a typically sprawling program that mixes independent discoveries with coolhunting studio films, cutting-edge genre work with artistically-minded episodic series. As always, there is a lot we are excited about seeing, beginning with these 25 films you might put a little digital star next to in your festival app. Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photographable. The great Garry Winogrand — depending on the day, my favorite photographer — is the subject of Sasha Waters Freyer’s documentary, which happens to be the […]

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“The Edit Room Became a Kind of Experimental Laboratory”: Editor Nyneve Laura Minnear on 306 Hollywood https://filmmakermagazine.com/104767-the-edit-room-became-a-kind-of-experimental-laboratory-editor-nyneve-laura-minnear-on-306-hollywood/ https://filmmakermagazine.com/104767-the-edit-room-became-a-kind-of-experimental-laboratory-editor-nyneve-laura-minnear-on-306-hollywood/#respond Thu, 01 Feb 2018 18:56:11 +0000 https://filmmakermagazine.com/?p=104767

As Scott Macaulay wrote in our 25 New Faces profile of 306 Hollywood directors Elan and Jonathan Bogarin last year, “In 2001, the pair — who together run the production house El Tigre Productions — began shooting their grandmother, Annette Ontell, in the Hillside, New Jersey house she resided in for 71 years. When she died in 2011, the Bogaríns decided, says Jonathan, ‘to keep the house and transform everything there into a film.’ The result is the beautifully strange 306 Hollywood, ‘a kooky, imaginative film,’ he says, that uses ‘a maximalist language of fiction film, art, dance and myth in […]

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