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Quiet on the Set, then
Action, As 9th Annual Bridge Film Festival Directs Students to “Let
Your Films Speak”
Each year since its founding in the spring of 2000, the Bridge
Film Festival at Brooklyn Friends School “improves in both
the quality of films submitted, and the number of Friends Schools
from around the world that participate,” according to David
Slezak, faculty member of Tandem Friends School in Charlottesville,
Virginia, in a report to his school committee. “Of note this
year is that there were films submitted from Pickering College in
Ontario, Canada, Ramallah Friends in Palestine, Brummana High School
in Lebanon, and Ackworth School in West Yorkshire, UK. A delegation
of students from Ackworth School made a week-long visit to New York
in order to participate in the festival.”
In addition to international Friends schools, a number of Quaker
schools from the United States were finalists: Delaware Valley Friends
School (PA), Brooklyn Friends School (NY), Friends’ Central
School (PA), Oakwood Friends School (NY, George School (PA), Cambridge
Friends School (MA), and Tandem Friends School (VA).
The festival day began with workshops that included cel animation
with Don Duga, the original creator of Frosty the Snowman; Adobe
Flash animation with Al Doyle, the Director of Instructional Technology
at The Town School; creating a short film in NYC in only 3-1/2 hours
with Lesley Yeo, a long-time digital film educator who is the BFS
Preschool and Lower School Technology Integrator; and video-blogging
with Heather Johnston and Gordon Eriksen, filmmakers and creators
of the food and wine blog SoGood.tv.
The Brooklyn Friends School’s Jazz Ensemble entertained during
a first-rate dinner in the BFS cafeteria. An introduction to the
festival was the first-time screening of a film interpretation of
Romeo and Juliet by students at Ramallah Friends, entitled “Fair
Palestine.” The film contained discussions of student perspectives
on their lives, followed by actual text by Shakespeare with settings
in Ramallah.
After introductions by Dr. Michael Nill, Head
of Brooklyn Friends School and festival director Andy Cohen,
the audience screened the nineteen finalists in the competition.
Films were categorized as narratives, documentaries, and public service
announcements—all
with themes rooted in Quakerism. After the screening, a panel of
judges retired for deliberation. The films were then critiqued by
a panel of judges and rated in terms of cinematography, creativity,
narrative, originality, and message based on the Quaker testimonies
of integrity, equality, stewardship, peace, simplicity and community.
During the deliberations, the audience was entertained and enlightened
by S. Epatha Merkerson, the actress well-known for her portrayal
of Lieutenant Van Buren on “Law and Order” for the past
15 years. She has many other film, television and Broadway credits
to her name and she is the recipient of numerous awards, including
the 2006 Golden Globe for her performance in “Lackawanna Blues.” Ms.
Merkerson answered questions from students with depth of thought
and experience. Her presentation was incredibly moving and inspiring
to both students and adults.
The Judges’ Choice Award for narrative film went to “Awakening,” by
Robyn Goodrich, Leci Rebin and Matti Legro of
Tandem Friends School, which told the story of
a girl who was “asleep to the support
around her.” The documentary award was presented to a team
of students from Brummana High School in Lebanon.
Their film, “PLAN-B,” concerned
students who were unable to produce a film due to logistical difficulties
of living in a war-torn country so they had to revert to making a
simple yet effective documentary of the struggles and dreams of the
student filmmakers themselves. The public service announcement award
went to Ian Clements of Delaware Valley Friends for “Who
Makes War.” This clever commercial was about a boy’s
military toys throwing down their weapons in peaceful protest. The
Spirit of the Festival Award went to a team of students from Oakwood
Friends School, for the documentary “Compass to Freedom,” the
story of the Quakers in New York State and the Underground Railroad.
Brooklyn Friends School students were represented in the Festival
by several entrants: Upper School student Matthew Gentile for his
film “Twenty-four Hundred,” Middle School students Larry
Nieves, Erin Carden, Kimberly Lionel, Dylan Major, Willa Rubin and
Jacob Figueroa for their short film “Triad,” and Ariana
Anderson, Alejandro Doerfler-Ludwig, Esperanza Gilbert, Lucca Leopardo-Brunt,
Jared Long, Dylan Moseley, Larry Nieves, Victoria Santiago, Brandon
Snagg, Jordan Sucher and Tara Yiu for their animated public service
announcement “Go Green.”
Many thanks and congratulations to all entrants this year for their
amazing work!
BRIDGE FILM FESTIVAL 2008 Finalist Narrative Films
* Judges’ Choice
Award **Spirit of the Festival Award
- “Semantics”—Ackworth School (England)
- “Twenty-Four Hundred”—Brooklyn Friends School (New
York)
- “Triad”—Brooklyn Friends School – (New
York)
- “Last Snow”—Cambridge Friends School (Massachusetts)
- “Redemption Diary”—Delaware Valley Friends
(Pennsylvania)
- “Eleutheromania”—George School (Pennsylvania)
- “Keep Your Change”—Pickering College (Canada)
- “Proper Response to Reality”—Tandem Friends School
(Virginia)
- * “Awakening”—Tandem Friends School (Virginia)
BRIDGE FILM FESTIVAL 2008 Finalist Documentary Films
- * “Plan-B”—Brummana High School (Lebanon)
- “Complex Simplicity”—Friends Central School (Pennsylvania)
- ** “Compass to Freedom”—Oakwood Friends School
(New York)
- “Consumerism”—Pickering College (Canada)
BRIDGE FILM FESTIVAL 2008 Finalist Public Service Announcements
- “Go Green”—Brooklyn Friends School (New York)
- * “Who Makes War”—Delaware Valley Friends (Pennsylvania)
- “See No Evil”—George School (Pennsylvania)
- “Merry Christmas”—Pickering College (Canada)
- “Kindness”—Tandem Friends School (Virginia)
- “A Hug a Day”—Tandem Friends School (Virginia)
Photos, from top: BFS Head of School Michael Nill; festival director
Andy Cohen; the Festival judges; Robyn Goodrich (Tandem Friends School)
with Andy Cohen; Don Duga’s cel animation workshop; digital media
challenge workshop.
Below, clockwise from upper left: S. Epatha Merkerson; and
with Andy Cohen: Matthew Gentile (Brooklyn Friends School); Larry
Nieves (Brooklyn Friends School); Ian Clements (Delaware
Valley Friends)
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