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August 03, 2006
Five Out of Seven Ain't Bad: New Yorkers Win Big in Sundance/Annenberg Fellowships

New York's Sundance dominance continued Wednesday when the Institute announced its Annenberg Film Fellows for 2006. Five of the seven selected projects have stories or filmmakers from the city, including Sundance '06 alum So Yong Kim (Treeless Mountain) and Tribeca/Cannes '05 veteran Kit Hui (pictured at right; A Breath Away).
Along with Kirsten Johnson (My Habibi) and the duos Cruz Angeles and Maria Topate (Don't Let Me Drown) and Andrew Dosunmu and Darci Picoult (Mother of George), the fellows receive an initial grant of $10,000 and "extended creative and financial support over a two-year period to facilitate the continued development of their projects." In other words: More labs, more money and a virtual guarantee that these films will not only get made, but also bow at Sundance in the next year or two.
So tip your cap or raise your coffee or whatever else you are drinking this morning and wish them luck. Full filmmaker bios and project descriptions follow the jump.
Kit Hui (writer/director) / A BREATH AWAY
Born and raised in Hong Kong, Kit Hui immigrated to the United States at age 16. She received her MFA from Columbia University’s Graduate Film Program. Her short film MISSING screened at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival and the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, and she recently participated in the 2006 Hong Kong Asian Financing Film Forum (HAF) and the Cannes Résidence du Festival de Cannes with A BREATH AWAY. Kit Hui attended the 2006 January Screenwriters Lab and the 2006 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
A BREATH AWAY: As a typhoon approaches Hong Kong, the residents of a high-rise apartment explore their need for human connection, family, and cultural identity in their increasingly isolated worlds.
Cruz Angeles (co-writer/director) & Maria Topete (co-writer) / DON’T LET ME DROWN
Born in Mexico City and raised in Los Angeles, Cruz Angeles is an award-winning student filmmaker from the graduate film program at NYU. A Bay Area native, Maria Topete began her film career while studying at U.C. Berkeley, and has collaborated as co-writer and producer on several award-winning short films. Their project DON’T LET ME DROWN was the 2006 American winner of the Sundance/ NHK International Filmmakers Award. Both Cruz Angeles and Maria Topete attended the 2005 January Screenwriters Lab and the 2005 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
DON’T LET ME DROWN portrays a post-September 11th world overflowing with fear and hate, where two Latino teens discover that the only thing that can keep them from drowning is each other.
Andrew Dosunmu (director) and Darci Picoult (writer) / MOTHER OF GEORGE
Originally from Nigeria, Andrew Dosunmu has worked as a fashion creative director and photographer for international editorial magazines, having photographed the artists Outkast, Eryka Badu, and Mos Def, among others. His documentary HOT IRONS won Best Documentary at FESPACO in Ouagaudougou and a Reel Award at the Toronto Film Festival, and he also directed several episodes of the highly-acclaimed South African television series Yizo Yizo 3. Darci Picoult’s one woman show, MY VIRGINIA, was presented in theatres and solo festivals both nationally and internationally. Her play ANCIENT LIGHTS was workshopped at New York Theatre Workshop and read at Lincoln Center, and her newest play, JAYSON WITH A Y, recently premiered at The New Group (naked) and has been optioned by commercial producers. Both Dosunmu and Picoult attended the 2005 January Screenwriters Lab and the 2005 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
In MOTHER OF GEORGE, a woman torn between her African culture and her new life in America struggles to please her husband and give him the son that will carry on his family’s legacy.
Kirsten Johnson (writer/director) / MY HABIBI
Kirsten Johnson’s most recent film, DEADLINE, (co-directed with Katy Chevigny), premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival, was broadcast on NBC, and is the winner of a Thurgood Marshall Award. Her cinematography is featured in FARENHEIT 9/11, the Academy Award-nominated ASYLUM, and the Sundance Film Festival documentaries AMERICAN STANDOFF, TWO TOWNS OF JASPER, and DERRIDA. Johnson attended the 2006 January Screenwriters Lab and the 2006 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
MY HABIBI: In post-9/11 New York, a Moroccan immigrant finds his reckless past catching up with him just as he is falling in love with an American photographer, forcing each of them to choose whom they must betray.
So Yong Kim (writer/director) / TREELESS MOUNTAIN
So Yong Kim was born and raised in Pusan, Korea, then immigrated to the United States when she was 12. She studied painting, performance, and video art at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago where she earned her MFA. Her directorial debut IN BETWEEN DAYS premiered in the Dramatic Competition at the Sundance Film Festival, where it won a Special Jury Prize for independent vision, and screened at the Berlin Film Festival's International Forum in 2006, where the film won the FIPRESCI Prize. So Yong Kim attended the 2006 January Screenwriters Lab and the 2006 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
TREELESS MOUNTAIN: Left by her mother in the care of their unsympathetic aunt, five-year-old Ling must take care of her younger sister as they adjust to a harsher life in the rural countryside of South Korea.
And I guess the non-New Yorkers deserve some sort of wink as well:
Jake Mahaffy (writer/director) / FREE IN DEED
Born and raised in Ohio, Jake Mahaffy has made a handful of short films and the feature-length WAR , which screened in the Frontier section of the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. Mahaffy studied filmmaking in Russia and co-founded the Handcranked Film collaborative in Boston in 2001. Mahaffy has received a grant from Creative Capital, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Sundance Institute’s inaugural Lynn Auerbach Screenwriting Fellowship for FREE IN DEED. Jake Mahaffy attended the 2005 June Screenwriters Lab and the 2006 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
FREE IN DEED: In order to tend for his own ill son, an intensely religious man secretly returns to his hometown where, years ago, his attempt at a miraculous healing became a criminal act.
Milford Thomas (co-writer/director) / UNCLOUDY DAY
Milford Thomas was raised in the North Alabama foothills of the Appalachians and worked as a production coordinator for Japanese television in Atlanta and Japan. His award-winning first film, CLAIRE, is a silent featurette shot entirely on an antique 35 mm hand-crank camera which has opened several major international festivals. Milford Thomas attended the 2006 January Screenwriters Lab and the 2006 June Directors and Screenwriters Lab.
In UNCLOUDY DAY, a black and white “early talkie” fantasy, a dangerous animal spirit returns home to 1930’s North Alabama, wreaking havoc on a rural community before she finds redemption and final peace through a handicapped girl’s magical vocal talent.
Posted by stvanairsdale at August 3, 2006 09:38 AM
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