Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Nevada Women’s Film Festival shifts to virtual event

- By Christophe­r Lawrence

Nikki Corda is making the best of a bad situation.

The Nevada Women’s Film Festival she founded in 2015 was scheduled to present its sixth installmen­t starting March 19.

COVID-19 had other plans, though, causing Gov. Steve Sisolak to issue his stay-at-home order two days earlier.

After taking time to regroup, Corda is bringing the festival online, with all 68 films that had been scheduled for the in-person fest, as part of a four-day virtual event. Films can be streamed at any time starting Monday, with online question-and-answer sessions scheduled Thursday through June 28.

“The upside is, we’ll be able to have participat­ion of nearly 95 percent of the filmmakers,” Corda says, since travel issues aren’t a concern. “That’s really unpreceden­ted for us. We’ve never had that. We’ve had maybe 25 percent participat­ion.”

She and her team are doing their best to replicate the interactio­ns viewers could have had with filmmakers had they attended the festival in person. Virtual admission to the Q&As is

FILM FESTIVAL

included with each film’s streaming cost. (For a complete schedule, list of films and ticket informatio­n, see nwffest.com.)

“It’s a really great opportunit­y for our community to have this chance to ask questions of filmmakers from all over the world,” Corda says — even if those opportunit­ies can lead to some unusual scheduling.

The session for “That’s the Way You Love,” a drama about a new mother’s sexual awakening, is scheduled for 10 a.m. June 28 to accommodat­e writer Sharon Eyal Azulay and director Limor Shmila, who’ll be Zoom-ing in from Israel with its 10-hour time difference.

“That might not be a typical time that we would think about participat­ing in a film festival,” Corda acknowledg­es. But it was worth it, she says, to be able to include them.

They won’t be the only ones experienci­ng a time lag, as the festival will be joined by filmmakers from many of the 23 countries represente­d, including Iran, India and Spain.

Among the festival’s highlights are a conversati­on with its Vanguard Winner, Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre, who directed the acclaimed “The Mustang,” which she filmed at Nevada State Prison in Carson City.

Writer-director Andrea A. Walter, a UNLV graduate, has been named Nevada Woman Filmmaker of the Year for her debut feature,

“Empty by Design.”

Director Carol Dysinger, who won an Oscar for best documentar­y short subject at this year’s ceremony for “Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You’re a Girl),” will join the festival virtually, as well.

All three films are part of the streaming presentati­on.

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 ??  ?? “The Mustang” was filmed at Nevada State Prison in Carson City.
“The Mustang” was filmed at Nevada State Prison in Carson City.
 ??  ?? Andrea A. Walter, Nevada Woman Filmmaker of the Year
Andrea A. Walter, Nevada Woman Filmmaker of the Year
 ?? Nevada Women’s Film Festival ?? Rhian Ramos stars in “Empty by Design.”
Nevada Women’s Film Festival Rhian Ramos stars in “Empty by Design.”

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