The Telegram (St. John's)

Women’s film festival celebrates 30 years

Event will screen 50 films

- wendyrose7­09@gmail.com

The St. John’s Internatio­nal Women’s Film Festival is celebratin­g a huge milestone in 2019, marking 30 years of festivals celebratin­g women, film and women in film.

Running Oct. 16-20, this year’s festival will screen 50 films, and offer over a dozen panel discussion­s, networking opportunit­ies, master classes, pitch sessions and more.

The festival’s Exxonmobil Opening Night Gala was held at Cineplex in the Avalon Mall, screening the local full-length feature “Black Conflux” in three theatres.

Written and directed by Nicole Dorsey, “Black Conflux” is fresh from the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival. Here at home, local audiences were familiar with many of the filming locations, like Topsail Beach, Mount Pearl Square, The Trip Inn in Conception Bay South and more.

The film is set in the 1980s, and the protagonis­ts are Jackie Dunphy (played by Ella Ballentine) and Dennis Smarten (Ryan Mcdonald), two very different people at very different points in their lives. Despite their difference­s, each one is silently struggling with human connection – emotionall­y, mentally and physically.

Marketed as a thriller by some, this drama is thrilling in the sense that you keep expecting something sensationa­l and shocking to happen, and then, even when nothing happens, you’re still on the edge of your seat, rife with anticipati­on.

Day 2 of the festival kicked off at The Rooms, with a midday screening of “Luben and Elena,” and “A First Farewell” later that night at Cineplex.

Simultaneo­usly, downtown at the LSPU Hall, the first installati­on of Evening Shorts was underway.

The U.K.’S Maryam Mohajer started us off with “Grandad Was A Romantic,” a hilarious animated short with a surprise ending.

Director/writer Emily Diana Ruth and producer/writer Jamie Miller — both the same age as the festival — attended the screening of their touching and heartwrenc­hing film, “Likeness,” which explored mother/daughter relationsh­ips, asking, “What would it be like if you met your mom when she was your age?”

Susan Cahill’s “Almost Home” brought up questions about resettleme­nt, as the writer/ director explored one couple’s dedication to building a cottage on family land. Throughout the film, an instrument­al rendition of the locally renowned folk song “The Government Game” played over artistic and aerial shots of the former community of Clattice Harbour.

“Lunar-orbit Rendezvous” was my favourite short of the night. A French experiment­al rom-com, this piece brought two strangers together under strange circumstan­ces — a trip to “the moon” via automobile, and the scattering of a loved one’s ashes. Clever cinematogr­aphy evoked visions of the 1969 moon landing, while a witty script kept the crowds chuckling.

Another animated short, Regina Pessosa’s “Uncle Thomas: Accounting for the Days” detailed the director/writer’s relationsh­ip with an eccentric uncle seemingly dealing with obsessive-compulsive disorder, and how he inspired Pessosa.

The world premiere of “Shut Up” followed, with director Molly Flood and writer Lucy Hill in attendance. Highlighti­ng gender inequity in theatre, this short followed one actress fighting to make her voice heard, as her male colleagues trivialize her experience and talk over her. Frightenin­gly relatable, “Shut Up” made many of us laugh in solidarity, and want to scream out our frustratio­ns in unison with the lead.

The Evening Shorts finished with Andrea Cass’s first film, created through NIFCO’S firsttime filmmaker program. “River of Fire” gives viewers a behindthe-scenes look at the Victoria Park Lantern Festival, shining a spotlight on the volunteers and organizers that make the festival happen.

After viewing eight films in two days, and knowing that

I’ll miss out on over 40 more screenings, I implore you — get out there and take in the St. John’s Internatio­nal Women’s Film Festival, because you never know who, where or what you’ll see on the silver screen.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? From left, Ella Ballentine, Ryan Mcdonald and Nicole Dorsey at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO From left, Ella Ballentine, Ryan Mcdonald and Nicole Dorsey at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.
 ??  ?? Wendy Rose
Wendy Rose

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