Brainwash is the original drive-in movie festival! Since 1995 they’ve delighted audiences with a selection of the bizarre, the unique, and just plain old well-made movies from independent producers all over the world. With an eye toward the abstract, the innovative and the weird, with a name like Brainwash (originally the Cacophony Short Film Video Drive-In Movies Festival), they attract entries they curate to be able to display some of the most cutting edge cinema from up and and coming directors, actors, producers and crews consistently year after year.
Interview with Dave Krzysik:
Matthew Toffolo: What is your Film Festival succeeding at doing for filmmakers?
Dave Krzysik: We have been working at getting wider exposure through European and domestic (US) cable TV.
MT: What would you expect to experience if you attend the festival this year (2016)?
DK: Some really great and just plain weird movies. People are always out there making them, and we get our share to screen.
MT: What are the qualifications for the selected films?
DK: We have to explain this to producers sometime, and all we could ever think of was one word: “Brainwashy”. I hope that helps!
MT: Do you think that some films really don’t get a fair shake from film festivals? And if so, why?
DK: I really have to say I think it’s fairer to approach this concept from the opposite, that a lot of movies would never get a fair shake outside of film festivals, considering the consistent state of the film industry’s concentration at the top.
MT: What motivates you and your team to do this festival?
DK: I must have been born for the movies, because after 22 years doing Brainwash, it’s still fun! The other people who work on the festival are all cinephiles of a certain type, that is, they appreciate the uncommon and the off-beat, the type of movies attracted to festivals in general and those with that extra edge that come to Brainwash.
MT: How has the festival changed since its inception?
DK: Technology! When we started in 1995, we screened an equal amount of 16mm film and VHS tape (older readers will remember those movie mediums). Then, shifting to digital, DVDs had to be produced by special services and they were expensive. Now, so many movies are produced entirely on IPhones that it has become one of the top rated movie cameras, right up there with Panavision, Arriflex, Bolex, Canon and the rest, and we get mostly digital file downloads.
MT: Where do you see the festival by 2020?
DK: More and more exposure for the producers. We find there’s an industry that’s growing for exposing independent movies for more relevant critical acclaim and more financial benefit for the producers and promoters that I think can continue to do so.
MT: What film have you seen the most times in your life?
DK: Probably The Wizard of Oz, because it was always shown on television, and I liked it a lot, usually during the holidays when I was much younger and out of school and could watch television. But the one I like the best is 2001, A Space Odyssey, by Stanley Kubrick, although I haven’t seen it nearly as many times (yet). The Day The Earth Stood Still is another great I’ve seen a lot, on TV, and, recently, at another outdoor screening.
MT: In one sentence, what makes a great film?
DK: What I call the economy of movement, as with Alfred Hitchcock, Federico Fellini, the afore-mentioned Stanley Kubrick (in 2001), and, one of my favorites, but obscure in the industry, George Kuchar.
MT: How is the film scene in your city?
DK: Always exploding with great movies and festivals in the greater SF Bay Area, a little stunted in Oakland, itself, at the present moment.

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Interviewer Matthew Toffolo is currently the CEO of the WILDsound FEEDBACK Film & Writing Festival. The festival that showcases 10-20 screenplay and story readings performed by professional actors every month. And the FEEDBACK Monthly Festival held in downtown Toronto on the last Thursday of every single month. Go to www.wildsound.ca for more information and to submit your work to the festival.
Reblogged this on WILDsound Writing and Film Festival Review.
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Reblogged this on WILDsound Writing and Film Festival Review.
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