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Jacmel, Haiti: Outdoor Film Festival Supports Growth of Haitian Cinema

Outdoor Movies HaitiThe Film Festival Jakmel is one of the biggest cultural events in . The festival showcases a selection of full length features, medium, and short films from the world of cinema

In 2004, Haitian artist Patrick Boucard and American filmmaker David Belle of FOSAJ (an organization in which supports arts and cultural development in Haiti), organized the first international film festival in Haiti. has a history as a arts and cultural center and sits on the southern coast. It is quite beautiful.

The festival objective is to support the growth of cinematographic art through the screening of films and cultural and artistic activities. Since its creation, over 200 films have been shown to a large Haitian and international audience.

The second edition of Film Festival Jacmel was something miraculous given the state of insecurity in Haiti. In Jacmel there was light and excitment for the week long film festival which ran from July 9 through July 16.

The festival featured an amazing array of international and local films. More than 15 directors attended, with representatives from 30 countries travelling from as far as , Canada, France, United States, Spain, Cuba, Guadeloupe, and other Caribbean nations.

The list of directors included Raoul Peck, Jeff Zimbalist, Abderrahmane Sissako, Dany Laferrière, Andrew Dosunmu, Jean Claude Flamand, Jacques Roc, and Janluk Stanislas among others.

Patrick Boucard, co-director and founder of the film festival, addressed the audience at the opening ceremony. He highlighted that festival would featured over 100 awards-films, including 21 films from local Haitian filmmakers ( titled Cinema La Kay). This year the film were divided into categories: : Africa, France, Americas and the Caribbean, the Earth, Children’s Films. All film screenings were free-of-charge to the general public.

This year all film screenings were shown at four different venues, including the Jackmel’s Wharf, a large open-air public space for night-time screenings. The other threee venues included former movie theater, Acropolys, a long dormant facility which has a seating capacity of 150. The larger Concorde disco, with balcony seating , had been harnessed as a daytime movie housing over 500. Ecole de Musique was reserved as screening venue for 200 viewers.

Jacmel Film Festival kicked off with Opening Night Film “Cousines”, a Haitian film, directed by filmmaker Richard Senecal. Jacmel’s Wharf was the official site for the film festival’s grand opening.

The dock was built about 6 years ago with the hope of attracting cruise ships to the era. Unfortunately, it was never used for that purpose due to poor construction. On Saturday, July 9 the wharf found a great purpose as an outdoor venue. Jacmelians came out in droves, children romped while the audience assembled to recorded music. A previously neglected section of Jacmel has suddenly found new life.

More then 2000 viewers attended Cousines’ world premier. The audience did not mind standing for nearly two hours to see the movie. Movies fans were not disappointed for the the film echoed sentiments which reflects on today’s Haitian economics reality and relationships. In addition to the film screening, there was an outdoor concert which kept the party going way past midnight. Security was plentiful but not oppressive.

Co-founder David Belle welcomed an enthusiatic crowd which doubled in size the second night of the Film Festival. As word of mouth seems to bring out the whole town, timachann (vendors) take advantage of this business opportunity to sell fritay, soda, and other snacks at the gate.

Similar to last year’s program, Guetty Felin organized workshops and dialogues with renowned filmmakers participating in the festival for people interested in filmmaking. All workshops took place at Alliance Francais .Writer and filmmaker Dany Laferriere led last Monday’s workshop on adapting novels to cinema. Participating in the first all day workshops were over 100 Haitians interested in film–high school students, graduates, journalists, and university students, those interested in becoming videographers, becoming actors, or those wanting to know how to understand films.

Following filmmaker Laferriere’s presentation on the difference between literature and film—you have to SEE not tell about –he presented an assignment. Write a short story with images that can be seen and offered two themes: a childhood remembrance or a story of the person being kidnapped and finding the weakest link in the situation to free themselves. Organized into working clusters, each group had to write a story together and in the final two hours the stories were presented to the group at large with observation and comments by the filmmaker. He emphasized that the storyteller must give personal account and create details that are deep and familiar with every day situation. All stories must be original, that are felt and can be seen. Dany kept the group entertained with intricate observations.

Brooklyn resident, Nigerian filmmaker Andrew Dosunmu led the second full day workshop on the practice of filmmaking. Concentrating on selected scenes from films, the group analyzed camera work and editing. Lighting, framing, and filming were included with demonstrations of techniques; participants provided the acting for scenes that were videoed and then analyzed.

Other Film Festival workshops’ this week include, Jean-Claude Falmand-Barny and Janluc Stanislas, who traveled from Guadeloupe, on making a short film, Abderrahmnae Sissako, casting and working with non-professional actors, and Haiti’s own Raoul Peck, Le Cinema d’Auteur.

The Wharf screenings were the backbone of the Festival but by Day-3 residents in Jacmel understood what the Festival was all about. Carrying the 65-page program in hand, and checking the signs around town with the screening schedule, Jacmelians filled the theatres. All the venues, including the 10 am screenings were full. The 5:30pm films was so popular that sometimes hundreds had not been able to get in.

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Jean Wyclef and Yele Cinema Bring Outdoor Movies to Haiti

nullProjections of films at outdoor locations in poor neighborhoods without electricity, the goal is to unite, entertain and educate through cinema.

NEED: Only 32% of households in have access to electricity and even fewer families own televisions or radios. Access to educational programming, news and entertainment is thus extremely limited.

RESPONSE: A customized truck with built-in generator and projector will travel to the slums of Port-au-Prince showing free outdoor projections of Creole-dubbed and French language feature films and documentaries that are part of the library of the Festival Film Jakmèl. These films will be interspersed with public service announcements and short promotional videos that address social, environmental and economic issues in a non-political manner.

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Malaysia Government Sponsors Outdoor Movies in Rural Villages

Malaysia Outdoor MoviesThe Information Ministry said it would re-introduce the ‘wayang pacak’ (free film shows) next month.

The Information Department-sponsored free film shows, popular in the 1970s and early 1980s, were effective in imparting information and entertainment among rural and sub-urban folk, said its minister Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek.

It’s a well known fact that ‘wayang pacak’ was in the olden days an avenue for the people to interact and catch up with each other.

Ahmad said apart from screening interesting movies, including cartoons, the free film shows would also show footage on developments, which the people had enjoyed over the years.

“The ministry treats the free film shows as an effective tool for the rural villagers to obtain valuable information on government policies,” he told a press conference after attending a dialogue session with officials and staff of his Ministry at the RTM Auditorium in Jalan P Ramlee here yesterday.

Ahmad said the programme was scrapped in the mid 80s because it could not compete with the increasing popularity of television and newspapers.

Believing that free film shows could be made popular again, Ahmad said the ministry would have to find innovative ways to attract people to watch them.

He said the shows could still be relevant in today’s society.

On another matter, Ahmad said the aim of showing ‘live’ parliamentary sessions on television for 30 minutes each time, was to ensure that people would be well informed on the latest debates or progress on the bills and laws.

“We will not show the whole sitting but only the relevant debates,” he said.

He said that based on his first tour of duty to Sarawak, he noticed the state government’s commitment in strengthening ties with the federal government.

He was also impressed with the state’s commitment in wanting to see the New Economic Policy be continued in an effort to eradicate hardcore poverty as well as to promote harmony and stability among the people.

Second Minister of Planning and Resource Management Dato Sri Awang Tengah Ali Hassan who is also minister in-charge of information in the state, Ministry of Information secretary-general Datuk Kamaruddin Siaraf, Bernama general manager Datuk Azman Ujang and state Information director Resat Salleh, political secretary Dr Junaidy Abdul Wahab and senior private secretary to the Information Ministry Idris Mahmood were also present at the press conference.

Earlier on, Ahmad paid courtesy calls on the Head of State Tun Datuk Patinggi Abang Muhammad Salahuddin and also on Chief Minister Pehin Sri Abdul Taib Mahmud.

Ahmad is the former parliamentary secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs prior to his appointment as Information Minister after the just concluded 12th General Election.

He was in town yesterday for his first working visit to Sarawak.

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Bridal Veil Outdoor Film Festival Benefits the Rwanda Cinema Center

Bridal Veil Film FestivalFor several years organizations such as Film Aid and the Cinema Center strive to better the quality of life of those in impoverished nations through the power of film, as well as giving them the resources and opportunities to tell their own stories with film. Their efforts in using inflatable movie screens and mobile outdoor cinema equipment from Open Air Cinema have proved extremely successful within villages and refugee camps in , , Kenya, & .

The Bridal Veil Film Festival is a charitable event to celebrate arts and international culture. The Festival is nestled between the mountains at the base of Bridal Veil Falls in Provo, . The three weekend event intends to raise money for the Rwanda Cinema Center. The festival begins September 12th and concludes September 28th. With a diverse selection of movies from over nine different countries, the Bridal Veil Film Festival is a unique celebration of culture and beauty that viewers will never forget.

Film Schedule

8 pm, Sept 12 – Life is Beautiful (Italy)
8 pm, Sept 13 – Amelie (France)
8 pm, Sept 14 – Dreams (Japan)
8 pm, Sept 18 – Children of Heaven (Iran)
8 pm, Sept 19 – Cinema Paradiso (Italy)
8 pm, Sept 20 – Chariots of Fire (England)
8 pm, Sept 21 – Grizzly Man ()
8 pm, Sept 25 – Wings of Desire (Germany)
8 pm, Sept 26 – Wardance (Uganda)
8 pm, Sept 27 – 2001 Space Odyssey (USA)
8 pm, Sept 28 – City of God (Brazil)

The Bridal Veil Film Festival is located at the foot of Bridal Veil Falls in Provo Canyon, Utah. The giant 50ft. screen and seating for 500 viewers is situated directly below the falls on the north side of the Provo river. The Falls are located about 3 miles from the entrance of the Canyon on the Provo side (southern entrance to the Canyon).

Price: $8 Donation Ticket. Available at Entrance or Online
Location: At the base of Bridal Veil Falls, Provo Canyon, Utah.
Bring: Blankets, lawn chairs, couches, recliners, etc. Dress warm!

More About the Rwanda Cinema Center

The Rwandan Genocide occurred in 1994 where nearly one million people were brutally murdered due to ethnic and economic differences. Eric Kabera, founder of the Rwanda Cinema Center, was an assistant to news crews coving the genocide events. He thought a film about the genocide would remind the world what happened during the three terrible months in Rwanda when so many lives were lost. In 1997, Eric Kabera created a film entitled 100 Days with British director, Nick Hughes, to raise awareness both locally and globally of the tragedy and violence occurring in Rwanda. His movie inspired the making of the film Hotel Rwanda.

In 2002, Eric Kabera founded the Rwanda Cinema Center with the intention to train and facilitate filmmaking in Rwanda. The film school trains youth how to make films in order for them to share their own stories. While these movies could be viewed in most parts of the world, there was no way to show the movies that were made in Rwanda to the people in Rwanda.

In 2005, Monica Horan Rosenthal from Everybody Love Raymond donated an Open Air Cinema inflatable movie screen system to Eric Kabera. The portability and durability of the Open Air Screen enabled Eric to launch the Hillywood Film Festival. The Hillywood Film Festival highlights movies created by Rwandan film makers from the Rwanda Cinema Center in conjunction with other international films and has been traveling the country for the past four years. The objective of this film festival is to provide two weeks of education and entertainment to the people of Rwanda. “Rwanda has one of the highest levels of illiteracy in , if not in the world, and you can imagine the power of these visuals,” says Eric Kabera. Many directors from and employees from the Tribeca Film Festival have come to to contribute to the festival. One Rwandan actor stated, “If we keep acting at least the world will know much more about Rwanda.”

Eric Kabera’s 16 ft screen is getting old and worn from rapid use. In June of 2008, Open Air Cinema donated a Sanyo Projector with a 9 ft movie screen and entered into a partnership with the Rwanda Cinema Center. Now Open Air Cinema is looking for more opportunities to help them get additional equipment in order for the film festival to expand to further countries in Africa such as Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, and Burundi.

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Moviemakers Give Back Through 'Filmanthropy'

Filmanthropy in Hollywood and BeyondWhat is filmanthropy?

It’s helping kids from the , and the land jobs in the movie industry.

It’s preserving and restoring films.

It’s showing classic movies to thousands of people living in Macedonian refugee camps.

Here’s how Caroline Baron, Vin Diesel, David O. Russell, Martin Scorsese and Jon Turteltaub practice filmanthropy.

David O. Russell: Ghetto Film School

“Why shouldn’t we help kids in poor urban areas of New York make films? Let’s see their films,” David O. Russell says. “The school is like the High School for the Performing Arts, but it’s for cinema. The goal is to build a magnet school. Right now, it’s this after-school program in the Bronx that’s spreading to public schools in other boroughs.”

Russell serves as a fund-raiser and educator, and has tag-teamed filmmaker friends like Spike Jonze and Gavin O’Connor to lend support to the school, which was founded in 2000.

In the workshops, he takes pitches from 30 kids. Then they get his feedback.

“I say things like, ‘I think this is cool. This is smart. That’s funny. I think this part could be better,’ ” says Russell. “Some of the films are fantastical. Some of them are really funny. Some are really gritty and urban, but by no means are they just stereotypically from the streets. One kid made a really funny movie using a stuffed squirrel that was terrorizing a house. It was this really simple kind of filmmaking that I could do with my own kids.”

Martin Scorsese: Film Foundation

Sometime in the late 1980s, Martin Scorsese learned that more than 75% of silent films had either deteriorated or disappeared completely. “It was even more disturbing to realize that 50% of all films made in America before 1950, sound and silent, were gone.”

So, in 1990, Scorsese gathered together his friends Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Francis Coppola, Woody Allen, Robert Redford, Stanley Kubrick and Sydney Pollack and started the Film Foundation. “We were able to get the archivists into the front offices of the studios and begin a program of systematic restoration of all the major titles in the vaults.”

In addition to film preservation, the foundation offers educational programs that teach students how to interpret the language of film.

“And because visual language today is so important — much more than ever — it’s essential for them to understand how to express themselves using the grammar of film as opposed to the grammar of advertising, which is something very different, made with a very different purpose,” Scorsese says.

He draws on the sci-fi classic “The Day the Earth Stood Still.”

“Why does it seem so immediate when it was made 57 years ago?” he asks. “You can start by examining the writing, the acting, the lighting, the framing, the use of music. And then the political context of 1950-51, when that film was made: You can learn a great deal about the history of America at that point, and understand how what’s going on outside the movie can inform the action, the story choices, the emphases. And it gives you a way of looking at our own period, the one we’re in right now, seeing the similarities and the differences.”

Caroline Baron: FilmAid International

Nine years ago, “Capote” producer Caroline Baron heard a report about one of the refugee camps in Macedonia. The big problems: idleness, fear, trauma and boredom.

Baron thought she could help: She would show films to create a diversion, an escape.

“Imagine that you have just survived walking thousands of miles, your life at risk every minute of that time. You manage to get to a refugee camp and you have nothing to do. You don’t know what your future holds,” Baron says. “Would it be crazy to bring screenings into refugee camps?”

Six weeks later, Baron, with one screen, one projector and three crews, was on her way.

“We had an audience of tens of thousands of people watching Charlie Chaplin films and ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ ” Baron recalls. “But in addition to feeding their imaginations, we realized that they needed information on land-mine awareness. So we showed this PSA on land mines.”

Baron sees the screen as a tool — a communicator. “When you’ve got 70, 90 or 100,000 people in a refugee camp, there is no Internet, no phone no BlackBerry to communicate. But a big movie screen does communicate. It’s very old-fashioned but very effective.”

Vin Diesel: One Race Global Film Foundation

Four years ago, Vin Diesel met with Dominican Republic president Leonel Fernandez.

“He wanted me to bring the film industry there,” Diesel says. “The president and I came up with this four-week summer course where we pull 32 kids from these impoverished neighborhoods and give them the education and tools to become filmmakers.”

The foundation, now in its third year, has achieved real success — so much so that when the “Fast & Furious” crew recently flew to the Dominican Republic to shoot there, they were able to employ 10 former students.

“It was like a dream come true,” says Diesel.

Jon Turteltaub: Inner-City Filmmakers

“What’s great about this program is that you don’t have just a group of kids all of whom want to become directors,” Jon Turteltaub says of ICF, which provides free year-round professional training to inner-city students. “These students want to work in the wardrobe department, the camera department, the editorial department as well as wanting to write and direct.”

The program seeks out students with obvious potential. “One young woman’s first gig was in the wardrobe department on ‘National Treasure,’ ” Turteltaub says. “Now she’s in the union. She’s now a costumer, and the only reason she’s there is because people want her. This is a career and a life she has — something she’s good at, something she worked hard to learn.”

Jenny Caceres

The moviemaking business has never been an easy one to get into even for someone who has lived in the heart of it her whole life.

“Before I got started in the Inner City Filmmakers program, my confidence was low, and I was a very quiet person,” says Jenny Caceres, 21. Born in Honduras and raised in Southern , Caceres says she never really had a “successful role model” to motivate her to follow her dreams. Thanks to ICF, she became a post-production assistant on Tina Fey’s “Baby Mamma.”

“This program has opened so many doors and led me to so many opportunities I wouldn’t have heard of without it,” Caceres says. “They called (the program) a film family, and that’s what it feels like to me.”

Alma Osorio and George Velez

Two teenagers from the Bronx recently visited and got to make a movie, too.

As participants in the Ghetto Film School Program, Alma Osorio and George Velez, both 16, were given the opportunity to shoot a film in as part of their final thesis project.

“I view film differently now because of the program,” Osorio says. “I view film as a form of art now, which I couldn’t say I did prior to this program.”

Adds Velez: “Since joining this program, I now know what it’s like to write a script, make storyboards and various other things to make your film better. My concept was to write a movie and shoot it, and they have given me the fundamentals that I can use on future filmmaking projects.”

Both students will enter their junior year of high school this year.

– Justin Kroll

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Hollywood Gives the Gift of Film

Children learning projection in TanzaniaWhile the Foreign Press Association (HFPA) lost about $6 million in telecast license fee when its Golden Globe Awards show on NBC was canceled due to the writers strike, the press group did not want the charities and non-profit organizations that it supports to be empty-handed this year.

So despite HFPA’s loss of the revenue from which it gets its funds to donate to worthy causes, the group that votes on and presents the Golden Globe Awards every January went ahead and held its annual grants and installation luncheon at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

In a statement, HFPA president Jorge Camara said, “Despite last January’s cancellation of the Annual Golden Globe Awards due to the Writers Guild strike that curtailed the Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s income, we’re delighted to honor our ongoing commitment to support entertainment industry-related film school and non-profit organizations. Over the past several years, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association Foundation has presented more than $7.5 million in financial grants to dozens of film schools and non-profit organizations.”

Heeding the old adage of giving till it hurts, the HFPA dipped from its savings and gave $759,865 in financial grants to various causes in the event that also honored the organization’s 2008-2009 slate of officers.

Celebrity Supporters

Helping announce grants were Aaron Eckhart and Jon Hamm, two actors who are starring in the hottest movie and TV show these days—“The Dark Knight” and “Mad Men,” respectively. Among those who accepted the checks on behalf of the grants were Chris “Ludacris” Bridges (Film Independent, Inc.), Rosario Dawson (Independent Feature Project), Dana Delany (University of , ), Dakota Fanning (California State Summer School Arts Foundation), Chris Messina ( Institute), Elizabeth Peña (National Association of Latino Independent Producers), and Rosie Perez (Inner-City Arts).

The beneficiaries ranged from top film schools in the US to FilmAid International; from The Ghetto Film School, Inc. to Streetlight Production Assistant Program, Inc., which provides job training and placement to underrepresented populations in LA. While the bulk of its donations are handed out at the annual luncheon, HFPA responds year-round to help in disaster relief campaigns and non-film related charities like Doctors Without Borders and Action Against Hunger.

Daily Variety paid tribute to HFPA’s philanthropic efforts by naming it as the publication’s Benefactor of the Year. Associate publisher Brian Gott gave HFPA head Camara a check of $20,000 to supplement the group’s endowment fund.

Variety, in an article written by David Mermelstein, said, “The Hollywood Foreign Press Association knows well philanthropy’s great dichotomy—that if you publicize your efforts, you’re vilified for grandstanding, while if you keep quiet about your good deeds, they may go unnoticed. The org is best known for the annual Golden Globe Awards, yet the HFPA also is a generous benefactor to many charities associated with film education.”

Lifesaving Scholarships

Mermelstein quoted Steve Anker, dean of the renowned CalArts’ School of Film/Video (where most of Pixar’s talents come from), one of HFPA’s beneficiaries, as saying, “These scholarships are lifesavers—literally. They have made it possible for students from around the world to come to CalArts. I only wish more corporations and foundations followed their lead.”

Being a Hollywood event, the luncheon wasn’t all seriousness and gravity. Rosie Perez, who wore a white tight-fitting dress by Tadashi, joked onstage as Ludacris stood behind her, “I am so nervous because I know he is looking at my butt.” The rapper-actor took the cue to look on appreciatively. But as Rosie somehow managed to walk down the stage in that skin-tight number, he said, “I am sorry but I was not looking at your butt. I apologize.”

Jon Hamm, who won a Golden Globe last January for his terrific work in “Mad Men,” quipped that his HFPA-related events usually attract calamities. He deadpanned, “First, it was the writers’ strike that canceled the Golden Globes. And now, it’s the earthquake. I just want to apologize ahead of time for the inevitable hotel fire that is bound to occur after the event.”

Aaron Eckhart, who is Harvey Dent in the commercial and critical hit “The Dark Knight,” received a lot of congratulations from the attendees for the film’s success. When we asked Aaron why the film resonated so well with moviegoers all over the world, he cited the late Heath Ledger’s performance as the Joker and the story’s multifaceted ramifications.

Among those in the audience were Fil-Ams Jasmin Chavez and Katrina Wan, two of Hollywood’s top publicists.

The columnist is an active voting member of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.
E-mail the columnist at rvnepales_5585@yahoo.com and read his blog, “The Nepales Report,” on http://blogs.inquirer.net/nepalesreport.

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War Dance Screening in Northern Uganda

This is the first installment in a series of posts by Open Air Cinema Technician Jay Johnson. Jay is presently in Northern where he has joined the makers of the Academy Award nominated documentary ‘War/Dance’ on their first return to the refugee camp where the documentary was filmed. Jay will assist the team in screening War/Dance on an Open Air Cinema Elite System in the remote refugee camp of .

Dancer in front of Inflatable Outdoor Movie ScreenWe are traveling way too fast on a dirt road heading north. For purposes of safety, we are grouped in a convoy of four Toyota Landcruisers and we’ve just managed to escape the city. For at least an hour now I have been bouncing around in the back seat. Everything rattles. Not only are we dealing with hundreds of potholes the size of kettle drums, but also an endless array of speed bumps. I have counted over 74 in the last one-mile stretch.

I am traveling with an American film crew to the war-zones of Northern Uganda to screen a documentary film to thousands of refugees. Somewhere between here and the Sudan is a truck full of equipment imported from the United States: a 25 foot inflatable movie screen, a mixing board, two DVD decks and hundreds of feet of tightly coiled power cords. The projector I hold tightly on my lap, hoping that somehow my bones will absorb any shock that might damage the fragile bulb. But its useless really.

We are scheduled to reach a refugee camp in Northern Uganda in about 8 hours, so with nothing else to do, I look back on the events that brought me here. About 4 weeks ago I happened upon a documentary called ‘War/Dance’ about a group of school children practicing for a dance competition in a refugee camp in Northern Uganda. I can honestly say that this was one of the most powerful documentaries I had ever seen. The difficult yet powerful stories were told without exaggeration and the imagery was spectacular. I had no idea that in 3 weeks I would be sitting with those children in that camp watching that documentary on an Open Air Cinema movie screen.

Our convoy finally reaches the camp, and I am feeling unbelievably beat. The sun is setting just behind the fields, and the clouds roll along the red horizon. I have seen War Dance a few times by now, so I instantly recognize the surroundings. Patong Primary School is just as it had appeared in the film: dirty yellow buildings set in the middle of the bush. Next to the school is a large football field full of dry grass and two shade trees. Under the trees I notice a large circle of school children, some banging drums as they spin, and others stomping barefoot in the red dirt. They are singing folk songs as loudly as they can.

Patongo Children Caught in the Headlights

Patongo Children Caught in the Headlights

I took a few pictures of those first few moments in the camp. The children are dancing in the beams of light coming from our Land Cruiser. Its dark out here, so their figures are all twisted into strange shapes.

Day Two

I didn’t sleep much last night. A wooden slat under the mattress of my bed was broken and I was slipping through it most of the night. Then sometime around 3am the frame holding up my mosquito net came crashing down on top of me. Of course there was no electricity and no lights so I couldn’t exactly get up to sort things out. I just threw the netting to the side and tried my best to ignore all the malarial mosquitos biting the soles of my feet.

By daybreak I am already out walking the dirt paths of Patongo, snapping photos of beetles, and stray dogs and these two little antelope-like creatures as they struggle to hop through the camp. They had been tied together at the legs, so every leap was cut short by a rope.

By about 8am I am outside in the parking lot sorting through the trucks to find the equipment we will need for this afternoon’s private screening of War Dance at the school. After a whole lot of wire-stripping and duct-taping, I finally have the JBL Eon speakers hooked up to a generator and a mixer board. We lift the whole rig into the back of one of the Toyotas, lash it down with florescent webbing, and send it off through the camp blasting a radio spot for tomorrow’s screening. We are hoping the majority of the 10,000 some odd people still living in the camp will join us tomorrow night on the football field, underneath the two trees where the movie screen will be inflated.

My mosquito net is working fine tonight, but I still can’t sleep. I’m kept awake by the buzzing in my own head. The circumstances I find myself in at the moment have finally overwhelmed me. Here I am, in a refugee camp surrounded by the images I had seen on my own TV just three weeks previous. I admit that when I first watched War Dance I became emotional enough that I even cried a few drops. By now I have met the three children who told their stories in the film. I don’t really feel it is my place to tell their stories here, but let me just say that they have all been through things as very young children that just do not seem at all possible. As they told their stories in the film I was definitely rattled, but to be here where all those things really happened leaves me feeling restless.

Day Three

I ordered one omelet at the restaurant across the street, but for some reason the waitress has brought me three. Its going to be a long day, so why not? I have made a checklist of things that need to be squared away before we go to the football field and set up the equipment. All the gear I will use today has been in Kenya for over a year. Its a system that we donated to an organization called Film Aid, and they have been using it to screen educational films in refugee camps in the area. It was shipped here overland in a truck, and its only a guess as to the condition it is in. So, the first task this morning is to unpack it all, inspect it, clean it, and test it. Fortunately, I have a few friends on the team who have always been ready to help out, namely Steve from the African Medical Research Foundation (AMREF) in Kampala and Charles from the Film Aid office in Nairobi.

To be continued…

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Open Air Cinema Brings Outdoor Movies to the Hills of Rwanda

Open Air Cinema brings outdoor movies to RwandaSo there is no cinema in your neighborhood? No cinema in your city? Not even a cinema in your country? Well, that didn’t stop a group of young Rwandan filmmakers from screening their films in nearly every corner of their country.

With an inflatable movie screen from Open Air Cinema thousands of Rwandans have been able to enjoy a special new brand of cinema: Rwandan cinema. A wave of Rwandan films have been circling the world since Eric Kabera (a Rwandan native) produced a film entitled 100 days, a story about the years of genocide that plagued . That film heavily influenced a number of other movies including the award-winning Hotel . Rwandan cinema has been highly acclaimed in film festivals as prestigious as the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City. But international success was not enough for Kabera, who felt that these films would have a much greater impact in rural Rwandan villages. Kabera immediately set up the Rwandan Film Center in the capital of Kigali as a space for young Rwandans to learn the skills needed to produce movies, films and documentaries about relating to Rwandan culture and history. Armed with a large inflatable movie screen from Open Air Cinema, the Rwandan Film Center has roamed through the hills of screening hundreds of films and movies, both foreign and domestic.

The lack of movie theaters in Rwanda has not at all hindered the growth of Rwandan cinema, with a portable compact cinema system, anybody anywhere can now enjoy the wonders of film!

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Open Air Cinema Stages Largest Outdoor Movie Event in Tanzania, Africa

Outdoor Movies in TanzaniaThe largest outdoor cinema event ever held in ! Open Air Cinema in cooperation with Film Aid International staged the largest outdoor movie event ever held on the continent of . An open air screening of George of the Jungle drew over 15,000 participants from a Sudanese refugee camp in . The movie screening was followed by a short documentary film.

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Thousands of Refugees Enjoy Outdoor Movies in Tanzania, Africa

Open Air brings films to Refugees in

. The forest stillness is broken by squeals of laughter as African refugee children watch monkeys drive cars in the movie “George of the Jungle.”
The next film “Neria,” teaches them about human rights, with an emphasis on the rights of women.
For many of the 15,000 or more Tanzanian refugees watching tonight, these are the first movies they’ve ever seen.
“These kids are going to have to move back to their country and not have anything like this, (but) for a little while, it’s good,” said Stuart Farmer, president of -based Open Air Cinema LLC, which provides outdoor movies on inflatable screens.
“With outdoor cinema in America, we’re here to entertain people and promote community involvement,” Farmer said. “But out in Africa, outdoor movies are much more than that.”
Farmer started Open Air Cinema in 2001 after winning a business competition at Brigham Young University. When he learned about FilmAid International, a nonprofit group that reaches out to refugees through film, Farmer knew they had to help.
So the company donated three screens, projectors and speaker systems, which all run on gas generators. Farmer just returned from three weeks in Africa where he saw the grateful reception.
“The inflatable screen represents a new technology for us that I believe is going to give us more flexibility,” said Andrew Heyduck, program director for FilmAid International. “We’re really, really happy. The inflatable screen has become a key part of what we do.”
Prior to the inflatable screens, films were shown on screens attached to stacked shipping crates.
Headquartered in New York City, FilmAid International brings educational videos and entertaining films to the nearly 33 million people who are forcibly displaced from their homes by war, natural disasters or political upheaval, according to the group’s Web site, www.filmaid.org. One of their biggest geographical focuses right now is Africa.
“We’re providing entertainment and education, but it’s also about giving them a voice,” Heyduck said.
Heyduck’s background is in delivering relief supplies to refugees. However, refugees need more than just food and first aid, he says.
“We’re … empowering them, giving them film production training,” he said. “We’re providing services that nobody else provides to refugees.”
FilmAid only goes into areas where basic life needs are already being addressed.
In response to education needs, the films address HIV/AIDS, domestic abuse, rape, sexual exploitation and land mines, as well as how to promote peace and reconciliation.
A refugee advisory committee screens each movie to check for cultural sensitivities and whether it would be relevant to that particular group.
Refugees also develop scripts, produce and shoot many of the films.
“Films that are shot on site have a real special impact,” Heyduck said. “They’re much more relevant.”
Tanzanian native Pius John was hired by FilmAid International in December 2002 as a technical assistant. He has moved up through the organization and is now a participatory video coordinator and helps to train others and repair equipment.
“Refugees love very much FilmAid,” John wrote in an e-mail to the Deseret Morning News from Tanzania. “It is the only program that can pass messages to the thousands of people at a time. FilmAid program also refresh refugees mind so as to forget the past!”
He said the program not only entertains and inspires refugees, but it provides them with skills and training that will help them find opportunities in their own countries.
Farmer said he was amazed at how respectful and gentle the crews were with the equipment that represented so much for them and the community.
“Refugees around the world need help,” Farmer said. “They have absolutely nothing. FilmAid is looking to educate them, also to entertain them and inspire them.”

See the footage made by FilmAid Event Staff in Tanzania

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Open Air Cinema Joins Hands with FilmAid International

Open Air Cinema is pleased to announce its support and partnership with FilmAid International. FilmAid is an established humanitarian organization which brings the power of open air cinema and outdoor film and documentary events to refugee camps around the world. We are excited to support such a remarkable program which effectively promotes education, health, the arts, and hope for humanity.

In May of 2007 Open Air Cinema will donate a $36,000 Elite Cinema System (including projector and screen) and provide on-site training in . We have high hopes for this donation and are excited to see it benefit the 100,000′s of viewers through FilmAid’s operations.

In addition to equipment support, Open Air Cinema Productions Inc. (CA) and Open Air Cinema Events Inc. (UT, AZ) are committed to financially supporting FilmAid through audience-based fundraising at all outdoor cinema events. We are targeting $25,000 in donations in 2007.

Every open air cinema movie event will feature FilmAid’s movie trailer and a way for the audience members to provide generous support. Customers and event planners will have an opportunity to donate themselves and match audience donations.

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