Happy Birthday: Aaron Sorkin

aaronsorkin.jpgHappy Birthday writer Aaron Sorkin

Born: Aaron Benjamin Sorkin
June 9, 1961 in New York City, New York, USA

Read reviews of the best of the writer:

TV POSTERBEST of THE WEST WING
Over 100 pages of BIOS and PICS

TV POSTERTHE WEST WING season 1
Created by Aaron Sorkin

TV POSTERTHE WEST WING season 2
Created by Aaron Sorkin

TV POSTERTHE WEST WING season 3
Created by Aaron Sorkin

TV POSTERTHE WEST WING season 4
Created by Aaron Sorkin

THE SOCIAL NETWORKTHE SOCIAL NETWORK
dir. Fincher
Stars:
Jesse Eisenberg
Andrew Garfield

MOVIE POSTERMONEYBALL
dir. Bennett Miller
Stars:
Brad Pitt
Robin Wright

Happy Birthday: Michael J. Fox

michaeljfoxHappy Birthday actor Michael J. Fox

Born: Michael Andrew Fox
June 9, 1961 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Married to: Tracy Pollan (16 July 1988 – present) (4 children)

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

Back to the FutureBack to the Future
1985
dir. Robert Zemeckis
starring
Fox
Christopher Lloyd

Back to the FutureBack to the Future II
1985
dir. Robert Zemeckis
starring
Fox
Christopher Lloyd
BACK TO THE FUTURE IIIBack to the Future III
1990
dir. Robert Zemeckis
starring
Fox
Christopher Lloyd

MOVIE POSTERTHE AMERICAN PRESIDENT
1995
dir. Rob Reiner
Stars:
Michael Douglas
Annette Bening

tv POSTERTHE MICHAEL J FOX SHOW TV SHOW PILOT
2013
Creators: Will Gluck, Sam Laybourne

TV POSTERBest of GOOD WIFE
REVIEWS, BIOS, PICS of the TV SERIES

Happy Birthday: Mae Whitman

maewhitman.jpgHappy Birthday actor Mae Whitman

Born: Mae Margaret Whitman
June 9, 1988 in Los Angeles, California, USA

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

MOVIE POSTERTHE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER
2012
dir. Stephen Chbosky

Stars:
Logan Lerman
Emma Watson

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World  Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
dir. Edgar Wright
Stars
Michael Cera
Mary Elizabeth Winstead

Nights in RodantheNights in Rodanthe
dir. George C. Wolfe
Starring
Lane
Richard Gere

actorARRESTED DEVELOPMENT Season 2
2004-2005
Stars
Portia de Rossi
Will Arnett

MOVIE POSTERTHE WIND RISES
2014
dir. Hayao Miyazaki
Stars:
Emily Blunt
Joseph Gordon-Levitt

actorARRESTED DEVELOPMENT Season 3
2005-2006
Stars
Alia Shawkat
David Cross

actorARRESTED DEVELOPMENT Best of the Series
Creator:
Mitchell Hurwitz

Happy Birthday: Natalie Portman

natalieportman.jpgHappy Birthday actor Natalie Portman

Born: Natalie Hershlag
June 9, 1981 in Jerusalem, Israel

Married to: Benjamin Millepied (4 August 2012 – present) (1 child)

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

megan foxTOP 20 NATALIE PORTMAN Movies

videoWATCH – TOP 20 NATALIE PORTMAN VIDEOS

LEON MOVIE POSTERLeon
1994
dir. Luc Besson
Starring
Jean Reno
Gary Oldman
Portman

HeatHeat
1995
dir. by Michael Mann
Starring
Robert DeNiro
Al Pacino

BEAUTIFUL GIRLS
1996
dir. Ted Demme
Stars:
Timothy Hutton
Matt Dillon

EVERYONE SAYS I LOVE YOU
1996
dir. Woody Allen
Stars:
Drew Barrymore
Goldie Hawn

THE PHANTOM MENACEStar Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace
1999
dir. George Lucas
Starring
Liam Neeson
Ewan McGregor

MOVIE POSTERWHERE THE HEART IT
2000
dir. Matt Williams

Stars:
Natalie Portman
Ashley Judd

ATTACK OF THE CLONESStar Wars Episode 2: Attack of the Clones
2002
dir. George Lucas
Starring
Portman

COLD MOUNTAIN
2003
dir. Anthony Minghella
Stars:
Jude Law
Nicole Kidman

Garden State
2004
dir. Zach Braff
starring
Zach Braff
Portman

CLOSER
2004
dir. Mike Nichols
Stars:
Julia Roberts
Natalie Portman

REVENGE OF THE SITHStar Wars Episode 3: Revenge of the Sith
2005
dir. George Lucas

V FOR VENDETTAV for Vendetta
2005
dir. James McTeigue
starring
Natalie Portman
Hugo Weaving

MOVIE POSTERGOYA’S GHOSTS
2006
dir. Milos Foreman
Stars:
Javier Bardem
Natalie Portman

Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium
2007
Directed by Zack Helm
Starring
Dustin Hoffman
Natalie Portman

THE DARJEELING LIMITEDThe Darjeeling Limited
2007
dir. Wes Anderson
starring
Owen Wilson
Adrien Brody
Jason Schwartzman

The Other Boleyn Girl
2008
Directed by Justin Chadwick
Starring
Portman
Scarlett Johansson
Eric Bana

BROTHERS Movie PosterBrothers
2009
dir. Jim Sheridan
Stars:
Jake Gyllenhaal
Natalie Portman
Tobey Maguire

NEW YORK I LOVE YOU Movie PosterNew York, I Love You
dir. Fatih Akin etc.
Starring
Shia LaBeouf
Natalie Portman

BLACK SWANBlack Swan
2010
dir. Darren Aronofsky
Stars:
Natalie Portman
Mila Kunis

No Strings AttachedNo Strings Attached
2011
dir. Ivan Reitman
Stars:
Natalie Portman
Ashton Kutcher

YOUR HIGHNESSYOUR HIGHNESS
2011
dir. David Gordon Green
Stars:
Danny McBride
Zooey Deschanel

THORTHOR
2011
dir. Kenneth Branagh
Stars:
Chris Hemsworth
Anthony Hopkins

MOVIE POSTERTHE PHANTOM MENACE 3D
2012
dir. George Lucas
Stars: Ewan McGregor
Liam Neeson

MOVIE POSTERTHOR: THE DARK WORLD
2013
dir. Alan Taylor
Stars:
Chris Hemsworth
Natalie Portman

MOVIE POSTERGOYA’S GHOSTS
2006
dir. Milos Foreman
Stars:
Javier Bardem
Natalie Portman

SEE TOP 100 NATALIE PORTMAN PHOTOS

and Ashton Kutcher

and Audrey Hepburn

and Baby

and Chris Hemsworth

and Dog

and Husband

and Keira Knightley

and Mila Kunis

and Oscar

and Scarlett Johansson

and Timothy Hutton

and Vincent Cassel

as Anne Frank

as Evey

as Jane

as Mathilda

as Nina Sayers

as Novalee

as Queen Amadala

at Harvard

Bald

Ballet

Beach

Bikini

Black and White

Blonde

Bob

Body

Casual

Chanel AD

Crying

Dior AD

Earrings

Ears

Elle

Eyebrows

Eyes

Face

Fashion

Feet

Funny

Glam

Glamour

Golden Globes Dress

Gorgeous

Gown

in Attack of the Clones

in Beautiful Girls

in Black Swan

in Brothers

in Closer

in Cold Mountain

in Domino One

in Everyone Says I Love You

in Free Zone

in Garden State

in Goya’s Ghosts

in Heat

in Hesher

in Mars Attacks!

in Mr. Magoriums Wonder Emporium

in My Blueberry Nights

in No Strings Attached

in Phantom Menace

in Revenge of the Sith

in The Darjeeling Limited

in The Other Boleyn Girl

in The Other Woman

in The Professional

in Thor

in V for Vendetta

in Where the Heart Is

in Your Highness

in Zoolander

Kissing Scene

Legs

Long Hair

Makeup

Mini Dress

Model

Nose

Oscar Dress

Photoshoot

Pink Dress

Pink Wig

Premiere

Red Carpet

Red Dress

Red Lipstick

Rolling Stone

Sex Scene

Short Hair

Shorts

Star Wars Style

Style

Teenager

Vogue

W Magazine

Wallpaper

White Dress

Happy Birthday: Johnny Depp

johnnydeppHappy Birthday actor Johnny Depp

Born: John Christopher Depp II
June 9, 1963 in Owensboro, Kentucky, USA

Married to: Amber Heard (3 February 2015 – present) (filed for divorce)

Read reviews of the best of the actor:

A Nightmare on Elm StreetA Nightmare on Elm Street
1984
dir. by Wes Craven
starring
Amanda Wyss
Depp

Alice in Wonderland Movie PosterAlice in Wonderland
dir. Tim Burton
Stars
Mia Wasikowska
Depp

PLATOONPlatoon
1986
dir. Oliver Stone
Starring
Charlie Sheen
Willem DaFoe

Cry Baby
1990
dir. John Waters
Cast
Depp
Amy Locane

EDWARD SCISSORHANDSEdward Scissorhands
1990
dir. Tim Burton
Starring
Depp
Winona Ryder

Ed WoodEd Wood
1994
dir. Burton
starring
Depp
Martin Landau

DEAD MANDead Man
1995
dir. Jim Jarmusch
Starring
Depp
Crispin Glover

Fear and Loathing in Las VegasFear and Loathing in Las Vegas
1998
dir. Terry Gilliam
Cast
Depp
Benicio Del Toro

SLEEPY HOLLOWSleepy Hollow
1999
dir. Tim Burton
Starring
Depp
Christina Ricci

ONCE UPON A TIME IN MEXICOOnce Upon a Time in Mexico
2003
dir. Robert Rodriguez
Starring
Antonio Banderas
Salma Hayek
Depp

THE CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARLPirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
2003
dir. Gore Verbinski

Finding Neverland
2004
dir. by Marc Forster
Starring
Depp
Kate Winslet

Charlie and the Chocolate FactoryCharlie and the Chocolate Factory
2005
dir. Tim Burton
Starring
Johnny Depp
Freddie Highmore

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's ChestPirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
2006
dir. Gore Verbinski

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN AT WORLD'S ENDPirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
2007
dir. Gore Verbinski
Starring
Deep
Keira Knightley

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
2007
dir. Burton
Starring
Depp
Helen Bonham Carter

PUBLIC ENEMIES Movie PosterPublic Enemies
2009
dir. Michael Mann
Starring
Johnny Depp
Christian Bale

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus Movie PosterThe Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
dir. Terry Gilliam
Stars:
Christopher Plummer
Lily Cole
Heath Ledger

The TouristThe Tourist
dir. Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
Stars:
Johnny Depp
Angelina Jolie

MOVIEBLOW
2001
dir. Ted Demme
Starring:
Johnny Depp
Penélope Cruz

RangoRANGO
dir. Gore Verbinski
Stars:
Johnny Depp
Isla Fisher

Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger TidesPirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
dir. Rob Marshall
Stars:
Johnny Depp
Penélope Cruz

MOVIE POSTERTHE RUM DIARY
dir. Bruce Robinson
Stars:
Johnny Depp

movie posterA NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 6
1991
dir. Rachel Talalay
Starring
Robert Englund
Yaphet Kotto

MOVIE POSTERHUGO
dir. Martin Scorsese
Stars
Asa Butterfield
Chloë Grace

MOVIE POSTER21 JUMP STREET
dir. Phil Lord
Chris Miller
Stars:
Jonah Hill
Channing Tatum

MOVIE POSTERDARK SHADOWS
dir. Tim Burton
Stars:
Johnny Depp
Michelle Pfeiffer

MOVIE POSTERTHE LONE RANGER
2013
dir. Gore Verbinski
Stars:
Johnny Depp
Armie Hammer

MOVIE POSTERWHAT’S EATING GILBERT GRAPE
1993
dir. Lasse Hallstrom
Stars:
Leonardo DiCaprio
Johnny Depp

MOVIE POSTERTRANSCEND
ENCE

2014
dir. Wally Pfister
Stars:
Johnny Depp
Kate Mara

TAKE A LOOK AT 100 PHOTOS OF JOHNNY DEPP

SEE – 2010 PHOTO

SEE – 2011 PHOTO

SEE – 24 JUMP STREET PHOTO

SEE – ABS PHOTO

SEE – ALICE IN WONDERLAND PHOTO

SEE – AND KIDS PHOTO

SEE – ANGELINA JOLIE PHOTO

SEE – ANIMATION PHOTO

SEE – BACKGROUND PHOTO

SEE – BARBER PHOTO

SEE – BATMAN PHOTO

SEE – BEACH PHOTO

SEE – BEARD PHOTO

SEE – BEFORE AND AFTER PHOTO

SEE – BEFORE NIGHT FALLS PHOTO

SEE – BENNY AND JOON PHOTO

SEE – BLACK BEARD PHOTO

SEE – BLONDE PHOTO

SEE – BODY PHOTO

SEE – BOOTS PHOTO

SEE – BUTT PHOTO

SEE – CALENDER PHOTO

SEE – CAPTAIN PHOTO

SEE – CARTOON PHOTO

SEE – CLOSE UP PHOTO

SEE – CROSS DRESS PHOTO

SEE – CRY BABY PHOTO

SEE – DARK SHADOWS PHOTO

SEE – DAUGHTER PHOTO

SEE – DEAD MAN PHOTO

SEE – DESKTOP PHOTO

SEE – DILLINGER PHOTO

SEE – DON JUAN PHOTO

SEE – DONNIE BRASCO PHOTO

SEE – DRAWINGS PHOTO

SEE – EDWARD SCISSORHANDS PHOTO

SEE – EW PHOTO

SEE – EYES WATSON PHOTO

SEE – FACE PHOTO

SEE – FACIAL HAIR PHOTO

SEE – FAMILY PHOTO

SEE – FASHION PHOTO

SEE – FEET PHOTO

SEE – GANGSTER PHOTO

SEE – GIRLFRIEND PHOTO

SEE – GLASSES PHOTO

SEE – GOATEE PHOTO

SEE – GQ PHOTO

SEE – GUITAR PHOTO

SEE – HAIR PHOTO

SEE – HANDSOME PHOTO

SEE – HAT PHOTO

SEE – HEADSHOT PHOTO

SEE – HIGH SCHOOL PHOTO

SEE – HOT PHOTO

SEE – JACK SPARROW PHOTO

SEE – JEANS PHOTO

SEE – JEWELRY PHOTO

SEE – KATE MOSS PHOTO

SEE – KEITH RICHARDS PHOTO

SEE – LIPS PHOTO

SEE – LONG HAIR PHOTO

SEE – MAD HATTER PHOTO

SEE – MAIRE CLAIRE PHOTO

SEE – MIDDLE FINGER PHOTO

SEE – MODEL PHOTO

SEE – MUSCLES PHOTO

SEE – NAKED PHOTO

SEE – NICOLAS CAGE PHOTO

SEE – NOSE PHOTO

SEE – PENELOPE CRUZ PHOTO

SEE – PEOPLE PHOTO

SEE – PIC PHOTO

SEE – PIRATES PHOTO

SEE – PLATOON PHOTO

SEE – PONYTAIL PHOTO

SEE – POP STAR PHOTO

SEE – POSE PHOTO

SEE – PREGNANT PHOTO

SEE – PREMIERE PHOTO

SEE – PROFILE PHOTO

SEE – RED CARPET PHOTO

SEE – RIDDLER PHOTO

SEE – ROLLING STONE PHOTO

SEE – SEXY PHOTO

SEE – SHIRT OFF PHOTO

SEE – SHOES PHOTO

SEE – SHORT HAIR PHOTO

SEE – SMOKING PHOTO

SEE – SUNGLASSES PHOTO

SEE – SWIMSUIT PHOTO

SEE – SWORD PHOTO

SEE – TATTOO PHOTO

SEE – TEENAGER PHOTO

SEE – TIM BURTON PHOTO

SEE – TUXEDO PHOTO

SEE – VANESSA PARADIS PHOTO

SEE – VANITY FAIR PHOTO

SEE – WALK OF FAME PHOTO

SEE – WALLPAPER PHOTO

SEE – WIFE PHOTO

SEE – WINONA RYDER PHOTO

WATCH TOP JOHNNY DEPP MOVIE SCENES

10. NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET, 1984 – Watch Depp bed and blood scene

9. ED WOOD, 1994 – Watch Depp in drag scene

8. FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS, 1998 – Watch Depp opening scene. As Hunter S. Thompson

7. SWEENEY TODD, 2007 – Watch singing Depp

6. SLEEPY HOLLOW, 1999 – Watch Johnny Depp sex scene with Christina Ricci

5. BLOW, 2001 – Watch Johnny Depp as George Jung

4. PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN, 2003 – Watch Depp the Pirates playing Jack Sparrow

3. EDWARD SCISSORHANDS, 1990 – Watch Johnny Depp as Edward the cutter with Winona Ryder. Snow scene

2. PUBLIC ENEMIES, 2009 – Watch Johnny Depp sex scene with Marion Cotillard

1. THE ASTRONAUT’S WIFE, 1999 – Watch sex scene with Charlize Theron

BONUS VIDEOS:

JOHNNY DEPP ARSENIO HALL – Watch 1991 interview promoting Edward Scissorhands

DEPP TRIBUTE – Watch Johnny Depp Tribute Video

NEW: Read the best of Feature Film Loglines from around the world

WILDsound Festival's avatarWILDsound Festival

Deadline TODAY: Screenplay Festival – Get FULL FEEDBACK. Get script performed by professional actors: http://www.wildsound.ca/screenplaycontest.html

Read the best of Feature Film Loglines from around the world.

CLICK the links and read the pitches:

PATRIOTE PERIL, by Thomas Thorpe:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/patriote_peril_by_thomas_thorpe.html

OUT FLYING PAST MY BEDTIME, by Linda Falcao:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/out_flying_past_my_bedtime_by_linda_falcao.html

TRANSIT OF VENUS, by Victor Pytko:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/transit_of_venus_by_victor_pytko.html

THE DRAGON NEVER DIES, by Farzin Youabian:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/the_dragon_never_dies_by_farzin_youabian.html

SIN, by April Nyse:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/sin_by_april_de_nyse.html

BEING MAN, by Jake Iorio:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/being_man_by_jake_iorio.html

ANOTHER DIMENSION, by Jeffrey Pier:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/another_dimension_by_jeffrey_pier.html

HIT YOUR MARK, by Breanna Barton-Shaw:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/hit_your_mark_by_breanna_barton-shaw.html

ONE SWEET DAY, by Nor Abd Talib:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/one_sweet_day_by_nor_shazana_abd_talib.html

BLUE AND SCARLET, by Angelina Gibson:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/blue_and_scarlet_by_angelina_gibson.html

HER SOUL INTENTION, by Linda Hullinger:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/her_soul_intention_by_linda_hullinger.html

THE STAFFORD MULTIPLEX THEATER, by William Smith:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/the_stafford_multiplex_theater_by_william_smith.html

VILLA, by Jessica Cruz:
http://www.wildsoundfestival.com/villa_by_jessica_cruz.html

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Interview with Festival Director Michel Zgarka (Views of the World Film & Music Festival)

Born in the creative brains of four Film, TV and Production and Marketing professionals, the originally US based Views of the World Film & Music Festival’s primary goal is to present films, scripts & film scores which have the power to raise awareness about vital social issues and inspiring audiences to take positive action. This year (2016), and for at least 2 more years, the beautiful city of Montréal will be the home of the Views of the World Film and Music Festival. This year, it will be from September 22 to 25.

http://www.viewsoftheworldfestival.com/

Interview with Michel Zgarka:

Matthew Toffolo: What is your Film Festival succeeding at doing for filmmakers?

Michel Zgarka: As our name and mission statement indicates clearly, we open the eyes of the attendees, participants and supporters on the rich existence of many cultures around the world, some ignored by the public, some too weak to spread their own message and some having no easy access to the modern Media

MT: What would you expect to experience if you attend the festival this year (2016)?

MZ: Solidity of the script
Quality of production
Being closed to our mission statement
Originality and creativity

MT: What are the qualifications for the selected films?

MZ: As there are thousands of film festivals on our planet, good films can be seen in many places. What is missing is the right context that makes the festival goer better understand and at times discover these new films popping up around the globe. Most festivals are more geared to media attention due to major talent attendance rather than the inherent quality of the properties (film, script and/or music), our main goal is to show talent through a complete work.

MT: What motivates you and your team to do this festival?

MZ: Discovering little “gems” and sharing these discoveries with all of the Festival attendees.

MT: How has the festival changed since its inception?

MZ: Little by little we become more attuned to the needs of producers and filmmakers from outside of the main media centers and our festival develops better tools to serve everyone

MT: Where do you see the festival by 2020?

MZ: Among the 10 best Festivals on Earth

MT: What film have you seen the most times in your life?

MZ: LA Confidential, Night Porter,

MT: In one sentence, what makes a great film?

MZ: The story (its script)

MT: How is the film scene in your city?

MZ: Blooming!

_____
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 towww.wildsound.ca for more information and to submit your work to the festival.

Interview with Festival Director Lynn M. Holley (Fine Arts Film Festival Santa Barbara)

The Fine Arts Film Festival premiered in Santa Barbara, California in 2010; it then occurred as a film festival in Venice, CA in 2015. In 2016 it will explode as an International Fine Arts Film Festival full of shorts plus a few full length features back in fabulous Santa Barbara, California! It will screen at more than one venue, including an outdoor night-time extravaganza. Originally conceived as a festival of films about the fine arts, it now incorporates dance and experimental art forms and approaches.

Interview with Lynn M. Holley:

Matthew Toffolo: What is your Film Festival succeeding at doing for filmmakers?

Lynn M. Holley: Exposure they might not get in major, all-purpose festivals.

MT: What would you expect to experience if you attend the festival this year (2016)?

LMH: Diversity of place, thought and disciplines. We will screen films from around the world.

MT: What are the qualifications for the selected films?

LMH: Made within the last 3 years; related to the visual arts or dance and have some importance to the field.

MT: Do you think that some films really don’t get a fair shake from film festivals? And if so, why?

LMH: All-purpose film festivals often ignore the disciplines in the arts: visual, dance, music, science and technology collaborations, etc..

MT: What motivates you and your team to do this festival?

LMH: The love film and the love of arts.

MT: How has the festival changed since its inception?

LMH: We now take in entries through http://www.Filmfreeway and focus on more genres in the arts.

MT: Where do you see the festival by 2020?

LMH: A larger, more international scene in Santa Barbara CA, which helps promote other film festivals here including the main one SBFF and the Jewish Film Festival.

MT: What film have you seen the most times in your life?

LMH: Caught-In-Paint by Rita Blitt (6 min); and numerous spy films over decades.

MT: In one sentence, what makes a great film?

LMH: There is an importance, a purpose for viewing it that does not require long narratives or dialogue.

MT: How is the film scene in your city?

LMH: Incredible; we are, after all, Santa Barbara, CA, home to Hollywood and the world.

fine_arts_film_festival.jpg

Lynn M. Holley is an executive consultant to the arts, a resident curator at the new center in Santa Barbara, CA for art, science and technology (SBCAST.org). She was initiated into film as a young film reviewer for a daily newspaper, and then as a journalist and director of galleries and an art center. She is a former journalist, narrative writer and filmmaker for promotions in the arts. She has a B.S. in Communications and an MA in Museum Studies. Ms Holley just returned from giving a presentation to a Global Conference in England on Museums, titled: The Dance of the Muses from Las Vegas to the Louvre.

_____
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 towww.wildsound.ca for more information and to submit your work to the festival.

Interview with Film Festival Director R. Presley Stephens (Tampa Bay Underground Film Festival)

The Tampa Bay Underground Film Festival was founded in 2014 by award-winning Bay Area filmmakers, actors, critics, artists and cinephiles to catch the independent films that fall through the cracks and end up… underground.  TBUFF celebrates good quality low budget films from Tampa and around the world and provides a professionally presented showcase for them.  The festival is usually held in early December, which is known as “late summer” in central Florida, and features more than a hundred films of all genres and lengths.

http://tbuff.org/

https://www.facebook.com/TampaBayUndergroundFilmFestival/

Interview with R. Presley Stephens:

Matthew Toffolo: What is your Film Festival succeeding at doing for filmmakers?

R. Presley Stephens:: We think film festivals should be about the filmmakers, which really isn’t the case with many other festivals. The original purpose of regional film festivals like ours was to showcase a lot of Sundance-type independent films that many people who lived far from Utah, Los Angeles and New York would have no opportunity to easily see since most such films weren’t going to get wide theatrical distribution.

But this was decades ago, before the proliferation of cable TV in general, before Sundance Channel specifically, before the internet and high quality streaming. What’s the point in every regional festival showing the “best of” Sundance, Cannes and Toronto when those movies are going to be on Sundance TV and Netflix six months later? Meanwhile filmmakers themselves don’t need festivals for distribution quite as much as they used to because there are so many other avenues to get those deals now and if all else fails, put it on YouTube and let the people decide. So the key festival selling points for most filmmakers now are networking, accolades and the relatively rare opportunity to see their work on a TRULY big screen in front of an enthusiastic live audience, all of which TBUFF provides.

And we try to go the extra steps of making that experience as exciting and fulfilling as possible with very thoughtful Q&A sessions for every film, marketing opportunities and meet & greet events. We also strive to excel with professional presentations (several TBUFF founders have worked at movie theaters and know a thing or two about projection), thorough preparation and frequent communication, which we’ve been told by our filmmakers is impressive enough to help set us apart from many other festivals.

MT: What would you expect to experience if you attend the festival this year (2016)?

RPS: TBUFF 2016 will once again be at a real cinema, offering the cast and crew and their friends and family and other festival attendees the opportunity to see the films on the big screen with digital sound. It’s usually a 4 day event (Dec. 1-4 this year), and we have movies all day and night long followed by after-parties with free appetizers at classy area restaurants most nights. We had a film panel on microbudget production and distribution last year and plan to have more this year. We have yet to have a Hollywood celebrity show up but certainly lots of local celebrities. We’ve been told that the crowning jewel of our event is our Oscars-like awards ceremony (“The Buffys!”) featuring clips of each nominated film (giving the always sold-out audience an opportunity to see why the films they probably didn’t get to watch are nominated), teary acceptance speeches, professional photo ops, engraved trophies and other ceremony trappings. For many of the nominated filmmakers, it’s basically another opportunity for a large audience to experience their films.

Undoubtedly one of the biggest selling points for northern filmmakers planning to attend is that TBUFF is held in subtropical Florida during the middle of winter, with highs usually in the 70s and the famous Pinellas County beaches less than 30 minutes away. Our attendance by selected filmmakers from outside the Sunshine State has been phenomenal – our main theme revolves around “native films” standing their ground against “invasive films” (hence the alligator-python tussle in our logo), so we usually have a fairly even split between Florida and non-Florida films, and so far more non-Florida filmmakers have shown up to represent their movies than Florida filmmakers! Last year that included not only several New York, Los Angeles and Canadian filmmakers, but also filmmakers from Ireland, England and Poland! Usually more than 60% of our films have representation at TBUFF, which seems crazy to us considering how young the festival is and its “underground” roots. This was even true the first year, before we had built up any real reputation at all, and we’re not all that sure why, but we’re certainly proud of our status.

MT: What are the qualifications for the selected films?

RPS: If you mean, the technical qualifications, we don’t really have a lot. Thus far we don’t even have a time limit on how long after completion a film can be submitted, but as we get bigger, that could change. As far as what we look for with selections… it’s honestly a mostly Potter Stewart scenario: we know it when we see it. But variety is very important to us – we have at least one short block of almost every genre, and we like conventional movies as much as weird stuff that our “underground” name would suggest. We showcase dramas, comedies, action, adventure, crime, musicals, horror, sci-fi, thrillers, fantasies, mysteries, romances, animation, children’s, religious, lgbt, foreign, documentaries, experimental – basically anything, and it doesn’t have to bizarre or on the fringe, though we definitely delight in those. Thanks to some good relationships with the theaters we’ve worked with, we’ve been able to program a lot of movies – 125 last year, which is on par with a lot of bigger “international” festivals. That included more than 20 features.

MT: Do you think that some films really don’t get a fair shake from film festivals? And if so, why?

RPS: It obviously depends on the festival, but certainly features without known talent have much more uphill battles on the overall circuit than features with stars or most any short, although “long shorts” (like 30-45 minutes) are difficult to program and often glossed over by festivals regardless of quality. TBUFF certainly isn’t going to turn its nose up at a celebrity-filled feature if it fits our program (we showcased a horror film in 2014 that had a bunch of well-known actors in it, including one who grew up in our area), but probably because of the word “underground” in our name, we rarely get such submissions, and we would indeed like to give as many slots as possible to good quality starless features that unknown “starving artist” filmmakers practically sacrificed their livelihoods to make. As far as long shorts, some of the best shorts that have been submitted to us were on the long side, so we found room for them. Again, we’ve been able to program a lot more movies than the typical underground film festival thanks to our good relationship with the movie theaters that we’ve worked with, as our festival has been much more of an asset than a burden to them.

MT: What motivates you and your team to do this festival?

RPS: Most of the TBUFF founders (including co-executive director Jason Beck, co-executive director Kelly Nunez, marketing director Chris Maria Reyes, assistant programming director Jay Franks, social media director Jaden Mikes, photography directors Nicholas Barrera and Lisa Shorts, audio-visual directors Chris Cook and Geoff Langhans, as well as myself) worked on several Liberty Lane Productions films, including the recently released feature “Poltergeist of Borley Forest.” Before its distribution, that movie had a film festival tour that took it from New York to Miami to Louisville to California, which was such a wonderful experience for us that we wanted to share it with other filmmakers, particularly in our home market of Tampa. This area already had a couple of prominent festivals but they were more centered around celebrity-driven independent productions than true “underground” projects in the vein of such indie classics as “Clerks,” “El Mariachi” and “Blair Witch Project,” which were all made on shoestring budgets by then-unknowns without any notable cast members. Their level of success is the exception-to-the-rule but these passion projects embody the spirit of filmmaking that TBUFF seeks. But we did want to give these filmmakers a more “international” festival-type experience than most other “underground” festivals do, so we incorporated what we felt like were the best aspects of all the festivals we’ve attended into our festival – the best aspects that would fit into our “underground” budget, of course.

MT: How has the festival changed since its inception?

RPS: TBUFF is only 3 years old, so not much! We were at a beach theater our first year, but it closed before the second year and we had to move inland into the main city, so that was a bit of a culture shock and led to different kinds of parties and a new technology learning curve. Otherwise our third year is largely looking the same as the first year, except bigger and better, with the same philosophy and a similar number of films. One very positive change is the substantial increase in submissions, with filmmakers seeking us out based on their previous positive experiences and word of mouth from other filmmakers, rather than us having to do a lot of scouting and convincing, as was the case in year 1. We’ve also expanded our staff beyond just the original founders, so hopefully this year will be a little less chaotic for the board members than in the past. But probably not!

MT: Where do you see the festival by 2020?

RPS: Being in a city with two other established, world-renown all-genre festivals, we certainly don’t see ourselves as being the preeminent festival at that or any point, especially considering our “underground” nature, but we do hope by then that we have connected with both the local and international film community in such a significant manner that we’ll be the “Big Three” instead of there just being the “Big Two.” We already get some media exposure, but hopefully in 4 years newspapers and TV stations will seek us out instead of the other way around and far more people in the area will know about us.

MT: What film have you seen the most times in your life?

RPS: Like most people of my era, probably “The Wizard of Oz” because it was on TV at least once a year for most of my childhood. “Pulp Fiction” seems likely the movie I saw most in theaters, because for 6 months it was at a theater I worked at, and I watched it religiously during my breaks and before and after my shifts, leading to it greatly influencing my own screenwriting style. As I’ve worked at several theaters over a two decade period, there are many movies I’ve seen the best parts of dozens of times each.

MT: In one sentence, what makes a great film?

RPS: A great film is one that truly becomes an escape from the real world – not just the first time you watch it, but all the many times you are compelled to watch it.

MT: How is the film scene in your city?

RPS: As is the case with most Florida markets, Hollywood isn’t exactly overrunning Tampa with major productions due to the lack of state tax incentives, but a fair number of true independent features are produced in the area every year, usually by filmmakers putting their own money into the projects and getting as much of their community involved as they can, and we definitely have a very supportive, interconnected film community. More of these are horror than any other genre, sometimes leading to Tampa being called the “Splatter Capital” of the state, but there are also conventional dramas and comedies as well as art films being produced. There are an abundance of young filmmakers in the area who are attending or have recently graduated from area schools with respected film programs such as the University of Tampa’s, University of South Florida’s and the Art Institute of Tampa, along with Central Florida and Full Sail in nearby Orlando and Ringling College in Sarasota, and these artists are cranking out a steady diet of high quality short films. Tampa-St. Pete has about 10 total film festivals of varying stature and many other film-related events, quite a few of which have strong attendance, so the film scene is very lively here indeed, and TBUFF is very excited and proud to be part of it and hopes to continue to be for years to come.

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Programming director and co-founder R. Presley Stephens has written and produced several underground films himself, including the starless Tampa supernatural horror flick “The Poltergeist of Borley Forest,” which somehow found its way into Redbox’s Top 20 rentals rankings in October 2015.  He was also a TV station film critic for 7 years and did weekend cinema projection work for half of his life, so he is about as deeply immersed in film culture as a person can get

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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 towww.wildsound.ca for more information and to submit your work to the festival.