12 FILMMAKERS and 8 PROJECTS SELECTED FOR 2012 PRODUCING LAB
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Greg Longstreet, Film Independent
Email: glongstreet@filmindependent.org
Tel: 310.432.1287
12 FILMMAKERS and 8 PROJECTS SELECTED FOR THE
FILM INDEPENDENT 2012 PRODUCING LAB
$25,000 SLOAN PRODUCERS GRANT AWARDED TO Producer Casey Fenton with Unmanned
LOS ANGELES (October 22, 2012) — Film Independent is pleased to announce the filmmakers and projects selected for its 12th annual Producing Lab. Sponsored by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the intensive five-week program offers promising producers a nurturing, creative environment as well as the resources and support needed to hone their skills, allowing them to move their current projects into production.
Film Independent also announces the recipient of the 6th annual Sloan Producers Grant to Casey Fenton, who is participating in the Producing Lab with his feature film project Unmanned. Fenton will receive a $25,000 development grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which seeks to create and develop new scripts and films about science and technology, and to see them into commercial production with national and international distribution. The grant was awarded on October 21, 2012 at the Film Independent Forum, presented by Indiewire. Unmanned is the story of a young Air Force drone operator who struggles to balance the stresses of going to war for the first time with the challenges of being a good father and husband, as he commutes each day between suburban family life and the war he fights by remote control. Last yearʼs winners were Brent Hoff and Malcom Pullinger with their feature film project El Diablo Rojo.
“Weʼre thrilled to continue our relationship with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and to be able to once again award a Sloan Producers Grant,” said Jennifer Kushner, Film Independentʼs Director of Artist Development. “Two of the films weʼve awarded this grant to in the past, Future Weather and Valley of Saints, premiered in 2012 at top-tier film festivals and received critical acclaim. I look forward to seeing Unmanned follow the same path.””We are delighted to continue our successful partnership with Film Independentʼs Producing Lab and to support Unmanned, a deeply engaging and original drama that raises urgent questions about our relationship to the technology–and to the morality–of contemporary war,” said Doron Weber, Vice President, Programs at the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. “Like our previous completed features with Film Independent, Unmanned received earlier support from our other film partners as well as Film Independent and we are confident that FIND’s superb team will help steer this exciting project into movie theaters before long.”
Karin Chien (Circumstance, The Exploding Girl), Ted Kroeber (Splinter, American Gun) and Alix Madigan (Winterʼs Bone) are this yearʼs Producing Lab mentors and will advise the selected filmmakers on the craft and business of producing.
Filmmakers were chosen based on the strength of their submitted script, business plan, and creative vision. The Producing Lab, which is also supported by the National Endowment for the Artsʼ Art Works program, is provided free to accepted producers, and upon completion, they become Film Independent Fellows, receiving year-round support including access to Film Independentʼs annual film educational offerings, on-staff Filmmaker Advisor and the Los Angeles Film Festival.
Recent projects developed through the Lab include Maryam Keshavarzʼs Circumstance, which was released theatrically in 2011 after premiering at the Sundance Film Festival; Aurora Guerrero and Charlene Agabaoʼs Mosquita y Mari, which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival; Musa Syeed and Nicholas Bruckmanʼs Valley of Saints, which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival; Jenny Deller and Kristin Fairweatherʼs Future Weather, which premiered at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival; Suzi Yoonessiʼs Dear Lemon Lima, which premiered at the 2009 Los Angeles Film Festival; Morgan Stiffʼs Mississippi Damned, which won the Grand Jury Prize at the 2009 Outfest Film Festival; Scott Prendergastʼs Kabluey, which premiered at the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival; Ted Kroeberʼs American Gun, which was nominated for three Spirit Awards in 2007; So Yong Kimʼs In Between Days, which was released by New Yorker Films in 2007; and Jessica Sandersʼ After Innocence, which was short-listed for the 2006 Academy Awards.
The 2012 Producing Lab, filmmakers and projects are:
1. Alaska Is A Drag – A young gay misfit teen works in a fish cannery in Alaska and he dreams big to escape his drab reality by training to be a professional boxer and become the most fabulous drag queen in town.
Kaz Kipp, Producer
Kaz Kipp belongs to the Nez Perce and Umatilla Tribes and was born and reared in Los Angeles. She has produced award winning short films that have screened around the world and has also produced multimedia content featured on Comedy Central’s atom.com, IFC, and the Sundance Channel. She produced the winning trailer of the Asian Pacific Islanders TV Pilot Shootout contest sponsored by FOX Diversity and the ID Film Festival. She is re-entering the festival circuit with the short film, “Fierce,” co- sponsored by NBC Universal and Film Independent. Currently, she is in development on feature films including Shaz Bennett’s, Alaska Is a Drag, which has been selected as a 2012 Sundance Institute Native Producing Fellowship recipient and the Producers Guild of America “The Power of Diversity” Workshop. A short version of the feature has been selected for AFIʼs Directing Workshop for Women and is set to premiere at the 2012 AFI Fest. Kipp has also earned fellowships from Film Independentʼs Project: Involve and ABC | Disney Television Groupʼs Native American IMPACT program. Kipp is also a board member to Longhouse Media, which is an indigenous media arts organization that nurtures the expression and development of Native artists.
2. And Then I Go – In the wilderness of junior high, Edwin Hanratty and his only friend, Flake, are at the bottom of the food chain. Branded together as misfits, they are demoralized daily and misunderstood by their parents and peers. As their fury quietly simmers and Edwin’s anxiety begins to overwhelm him, Flake’s unthinkable idea of bringing guns into their school as a form of vengeance offers them a spectacular and terrifying release.
Rebecca Green, Producer
Rebecca Green is the Manager of Producing Initiatives for the Sundance Institute and is also a member of the extended Sundance family, having been a screener for the Festival for two years, as well as an attendee of the Producers Conference in 2007. As an independent producer, Green most recently completed the micro-budget feature film Something Real and Good, which will be released by GoDigital in 2013. Green is developing several projects including And Then I Go, written and to be directed by Brett Haley (The New Year) with executive producer John Hillcoat, as well as It Follows, a horror script written and to be directed by David Robert Mitchell (Myth of the American Sleepover) and If You Close Your Eyes, written and to be directed by Claudia Sparrow, who won a Student Emmy Award for her short film “El Americano.” Green also produced Tug, which premiered at the 2010 Newport Beach Film Festival and will be released in 2013. Prior to her work as a producer, Green was the Head of Creative Development for TicTock Studios, a production company in Michigan, where she played an instrumental role in the grassroots campaign to implement the state’s film incentives program. Green worked at Paramount Pictures as Vice President of Lynda Obst Productions and prior to Obst, spent four years at Lionsgate, where she was a Creative Executive, as well as working in acquisitions. In addition to her producing and executive experience, Green has also worked as a screener for the Los Angeles Film Festival and has spoken on panels for organizations such as USC, IFP, and Film Independent. She earned her BFA in Filmmaking from the University of the North Carolina School of the Arts and serves on the Steering Committee for the school’s West coast Alumni Association.
Laura D. Smith, Producer
Laura D. Smith began her film career working in development and production under Academy Award nominated filmmaker Andrew Niccol at his banner Niccol Films, followed by Ghoulardi Film Company, where she worked with Academy Award- nominated filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson and his producer JoAnne Sellar. Smith then went on to partner with producer Holly Wiersma, where she served as Associate Producer on the independent features Happy Endings, Come Early Morning, Lonely Hearts, The Tenants, and Factory Girl and was Co-Producer on The Year of Getting to Know Us and The Six Wives of Henry Lefay.
After branching out on her own, Smith produced the critically-acclaimed feature That Evening Sun, written and directed by Scott Teems, which won the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature and Special Jury Prize for Best Ensemble Cast at its SXSW premiere. The film went on to garner over a dozen awards on the film festival circuit, two Film Independent Spirit Award nominations, and was released theatrically in 2009. She then produced the independent feature Sironia with filmmaker Brandon Dickerson, which won an Audience Award at its Austin Film Festival premiere in 2011 and is being released this fall.
Smith is currently in post-production on the documentary feature Holbrook/Twain: An American Odyssey with filmmaker Scott Teems, about Academy Award nominated actor Hal Holbrook and his famed one-man stage show Mark Twain Tonight! She has numerous other projects in development, including The Quarry, written and to be
directed by Teems, based on the critically-acclaimed novel by Damon Galgut; And Then I Go, written and to be directed by Brett Haley (The New Year) with executive producer John Hillcoat; It Follows, a horror script written and to be directed by David Robert Mitchell (Myth of the American Sleepover), and If You Close Your Eyes, written and to be directed by Claudia Sparrow, who won a Student Emmy Award for her short film “El Americano.”
Smith received her undergraduate degree from U.C.L.A., with a major in Mass Communications and specialization in Business & Administration.
3. Imperial Dreams – Two exceptional young black men from the Imperial Courts project in Watts find out the hard way that being an American dreamer doesnʼt make you heir to the American Dream.
Katherine Fairfax Wright, Producer
Katherine Fairfax Wright grew up in Los Angeles and graduated with a double major in Film Studies and Anthropology from Columbia University. She produced Gabi on the Roof in July, and has worked in a producing role on several other award-winning films, including Lumo and Les Vulnerables. She is the co-director, editor, and cinematographer of Call Me Kuchu (2012, Berlin—Teddy Award/Cinema Fairbindet prize, Hot Docs—Best International Feature), which tells the story of the last year in the life of the first openly gay man in Uganda. The film has been supported by numerous international organizations and grantmakers, including Cinereach, Chicken & Egg Pictures, Catapult Film Fund, Film Independent, and the Garrett Scott Documentary Development Grant. In 2012, she was named one of Filmmaker Magazine‘s “25 New Faces of Independent Film,” and was also named a Chaz & Roger Ebert Directing Fellow. She is an alumnus of the 2011 Film Independent Documentary Lab and the Garrett Scott Documentary Development Grant at Full Frame.
Malik Vitthal, Producer/Co-Writer/Director
Malik Vitthal was born in Los Angeles and was immersed in Eastern philosophy at an early age while traveling the world with his mother. Vitthal was selected to represent the United States three times as a Delegate at the World Youth Conference for Peace in India. An alumnus of the USC School of Cinematic Arts and a FIND Project Involve fellow, he has made six short films that have been screened at festivals worldwide. Vitthal co-wrote the screenplay Imperial Dreams, which was developed at the 2011 Sundance Institute Screenwriters Lab where it received the Time Warner Storytelling Grant and the Lynn Auerbach Screenwriting Fellowship. Vitthal also participated in the inaugural 2011-12 Jerusalem International Film Lab, and Imperial Dreams will mark his feature directorial debut.
4. Jack of the Red Hearts – A rebellious teen on the run from her probation officer cons her way into a suburban family as a live-in helper for their Autistic daughter – an experience that changes her cynical perception of the world, but threatens to be snatched away at any moment as the law catches up with her.
Lucy Mukerjee, Producer
Lucy Mukerjee is the Vice President of Production and Development at After Dark Films. She is responsible for identifying potential feature projects that fit the company’s mandate and developing that material until it is ready to go into production. Mukerjee works alongside the writers and directors, overseeing the entire filmmaking process, from the initial pitch, through the casting, set visits, and notes on rough cuts, to the film’s delivery. During her time at After Dark, she has produced 13 horror features for Lionsgate and 4 action movies for Warner Bros. In 2008, Mukerjee was the Co- Executive Producer of Flirting with Forty, starring Heather Locklear – a film she set up independently after optioning the novel by Jane Porter and selling it to Sony Pictures Television. Over 4.6 million viewers watched Flirting with Forty when it premiered on Lifetime, making it one of the most watched television movies of 2008. This year she also became a voting member of the Producer’s Guild of America, and a Programmer for Q Films, the LGBTQ Film Festival of Long Beach. She is a regular fixture on juries and committees for GLAAD and the Outfest Film Festival, and was nominated by Power Up as one of the year’s Amazing Gay Women In Showbiz. Mukerjee considers herself an advocate for female filmmakers, and strives to enable more women to get their stories onto the big screen.
Janet Grillo, Producer/Director
Janet Grillo produced such award-winning films as a creative executive at New Line Cinema as Pump up the Volume, House Party and Whoʼs the Man, and then later as an independent producer with the Sundance favorites Joe the King and Searching for Paradise. In 2008, she won an Emmy for the HBO documentary Autism: The Musical. Her short fiction film, Flying Lessons, debuted at Palm Springs International Short Film Festival, won the Best Dramatic Short at First Glance Hollywood, and the Silver Lei at the Honolulu Film Festival. It inspired the critically acclaimed full-length narrative feature Fly Away which premiered in competition at the South By Southwest Film Festival in 2011, winning Best Narrative Film at the Arizona Film Festival, before opening theatrically in select cities, to excellent reviews from The New York Times, Huffington Post, New York Observer and Los Angeles Times, which called it “most overlooked for an Oscar.” Fly Away continues in international release via iTunes, Amazon, Netflix. Grillo is currently an Associate Professor of the Arts at NYU Tisch School of the Arts, in Film Producing and Screenwriting.
5. Manos Sucias – A desperate fisherman and a naive kid on a mission to travel up the Pacific coast of Colombia in a small boat, towing a torpedo filled with millions of dollars of cocaine, must navigate their difficult relationship while fighting to survive their journey through the war-torn region.
Márcia Nunes, Producer
Márcia Nunes was most recently the Manager, International Sales and Acquisitions for Goldcrest Films, where was responsible for licensing all-rights deals in a variety of territories including Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and select European countries, and the airlines. With a history of exceeding set targets, Nunesʼ successes include pre-selling the 2011 Sundance hit The Art of Getting By, and selling Todd Solondzʼ newest film, Dark Horse (Official selection of the 2011 Venice and Toronto Film Festivals). Nunes was also the Production Coordinator for Goldcrest Films on the Academy Award-nominated documentary, Restrepo. Before joining Goldcrest in 2008, Nunes was the Sales Manager for an off-Broadway production company. She later worked for the prestigious entertainment PR firm, Terry Hines and Associates, focusing on Hispanic Marketing campaigns for such films as Spiderman 3, The Departed, Babel, and Happy Feet. Nunes holds a Master’s degree in Film Business from New York University and a Bachelor’s degree with honors from Barnard College, Columbia University. She has lived across South and North America, and is also fluent in Portuguese, Spanish and French. Nunes is currently based in New York City where she works as a producer and an independent consultant in development, financing and distribution strategy.
Elena Greenlee, Producer
Elena Greenlee was born and raised in Brooklyn, but her passion for filmmaking has been honed all over the world. Fluent in four languages and with a background in documentary filmmaking, she is a narrative producer in the service of telling socially relevant stories from diverse and unexplored angles. Her first film was shot in Havana, Cuba, and screened at festivals internationally as well as on broadcast TV in the
Dominican Republic. While living in Rio de Janeiro, Greenlee worked with actors from the Academy Award nominated film City of God, developing a free film school to serve underprivileged youth from Rio’s favelas. Since returning to New York in 2007 to attend NYU’s Graduate Film School, Greenlee has produced numerous short films that screened at top festivals across the USA, including SXSW, Rhode Island International, and Aspen Shortsfest. At Tisch, Elena was awarded the Spike Lee Fellowship, and the Clive Davis Award for Excellence in Music in Film. Manos Sucias is her first feature film.
6. Resonance – Two damaged young men trying to reclaim their lives, push each other to the breaking point.
Katie Knab, Producer
Katie Knab is a member of the Association of Independent Creative Producers and regularly produces both long and short form broadcast commercial work for a diverse range of international brands including BMW, John Frieda, Capital One, Jergens and Vanguard. After graduating with a degree in architecture, Knab brought her appreciation for design to her career in the film and TV world and has worked in production in various capacities for the past seven years in New York City. She is always drawn to projects that explore relationships and our innate needs and desires. She is also drawn to humanity’s impact on the environment and how to expose and educate for future generations, which is what led her to Flutter, her recently completed short observational documentary that screened at Cannes in May, featuring a 78 year-old butterfly collector and his journey to Vietnam. Knab is currently producing her first feature, Black Sun, chronicling a rebellious playboy’s success and demise amongst the Lost Generation in 1920’s Paris.
7. Snow in April – After the untimely loss of her soul mate, a Minneapolis artist seeks the courage to love again.
Van Hayden, Producer
Van Hayden launched his production career in 1989 when he sublet his Minneapolis apartment and drove to New York City, to work as an unpaid intern on the set of Spike Lee’s Mo’ Better Blues. After production on the film wrapped, Lee hired Hayden to work as a staffer at Leeʼs prestigious, Brooklyn-based, 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks headquarters. Lee nurtured Haydenʼs career by hiring him as his 1st Assistant Director on a series of iconic Nike commercials, Leviʼs Jeans spots, music videos and the Emmy Award-winning documentary: Brooklynʼs Own, Iron Mike Tyson, for Home Box Office. Lee also arranged for Hayden to work as an apprentice sound editor on Lee’s Jungle Fever.
As an independent Producer and First Assistant Director, Hayden has compiled an impressive array of more than 50 feature film, television and web series credits including: Hustle & Flow; Nights in Rodanthe; Oprah Winfrey Presents Their Eyes Were Watching God; Kids; But, Iʼm a Cheerleader; Things You Can Tell Just By Looking at Her; Lovely & Amazing; Greek; WIGS, The Unknown, Rocket Science; The Assassination of Richard Nixon; Frankie Go Boom; and three films by Director Bob Odenkirk: The Brothers Solomon; Letʼs Go to Prison; and Melvin Goes to Dinner.
Prior to his 23-plus years in production, Hayden worked as an award-winning journalist and editor at various professional news outlets, including: The Associated Press, New York Newsday, The Philadelphia Daily News, The Minnesota Daily, WMMR Radio and The Duluth News Tribune.
Hayden was elected in 2007 to serve his first two-year term as Co-Chair of The Directors Guild of Americaʼs African American Steering Committee. In 2009, Hayden was re- elected to the post. Also in 2009, Hayden was selected by the senior leadership of The Guild to serve on its national contract negotiating committee, lead by Gil Cates, Jay Roth and DGA President Taylor Hackford. For the past six years, Hayden has served as a juror at The Pan-African Film Festival. He resides in Los Angeles.
8. Unmanned – A young Air Force drone operator struggles to balance the stresses of going to war for the first time with the challenges of being a good father and husband, as he commutes each day between suburban family life and the war he fights by remote control.
Casey Fenton, Producer
Casey Fenton is an independent producer in Los Angeles and an alumnus of the American Film Institute. Prior to his work in narrative fiction he founded the West End Media Center, a digital media training and production center in the San Francisco Bay Area as well as NextGen TV, a youth run television channel on regional Comcast cable. While at AFI he was awarded a scholarship from the Hollywood Foreign Press for his accomplishments as a Producing Fellow. He is currently producing content for both the web and television. While at AFI, Fenton produced the Unmanned short, which played at several festivals, including Tribeca and AFI Fest. He was recently recognized at Tribeca as a member of the Panavision-sponsored New Filmmakers Panel, part of the Tribeca Talks series. Fenton also participated in Film Independentʼs 2012 Fast Track program.
ABOUT FILM INDEPENDENT
Film Independent is a non-profit arts organization that champions independent film and supports a community of artists who embody diversity, innovation, and uniqueness of vision. Film Independent helps filmmakers make their movies, builds an audience for their projects, and works to diversify the film industry. Film Independentʼs Board of Directors, filmmakers, staff, and constituents, is comprised of an inclusive community of individuals across ability, age, ethnicity, gender, race and sexual orientation. Anyone passionate about film can become a member, whether you are a filmmaker, industry professional, or a film lover.
Film Independent produces the Spirit Awards, the annual celebration honoring artist- driven films and recognizing the finest achievements of American independent filmmakers. Film Independent also produces the Los Angeles Film Festival, showcasing the best of American and international cinema and the Film Independent at LACMA Film Series, a year-round, weekly program that offers unique cinematic experiences for the Los Angeles creative community and the general public.
With over 250 annual screenings and events, Film Independent provides access to a network of like-minded artists who are driving creativity in the film industry. Film Independentʼs Artist Development program offers free Labs for selected writers, directors, producers and documentary filmmakers and presents year-round networking opportunities. Project:Involve is Film Independentʼs signature program dedicated to fostering the careers of talented filmmakers from communities traditionally underrepresented in the film industry.
For more information or to become a member, visit FilmIndependent.org.
ABOUT THE ALFRED P. SLOAN FOUNDATION
The New York based Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, founded in 1934, makes grants in science, technology, and economic performance. Sloanʼs program in public understanding of science and technology, directed by Doron Weber, supports books, radio, film, television, theater, opera and the Internet to reach a wide, non-specialized audience. For more than a decade, Sloan has partnered with six of the top film schools in the country – AFI, Carnegie Mellon, Columbia, NYU, UCLA, and USC – and established annual awards in screenwriting and film production. The Foundation also sponsors screenwriting and film production workshops at Sundance, the Hamptons, Tribeca, and Film Independent, and has helped develop such feature films as Robot and Frank, originally a 20k student film production grant at NYU, Valley of Saints, one of the first films shot in Kashmir, and Future Weather, winner at the Hamptons Film Festival, all released in 2012. In addition to these projects, Sloan honored feature films include Another Earth, Small, Beautifully Moving Parts, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Obselidia and Agora. The Foundation also supports the Coolidge Corner Theatre “Science on Screen” initiative, which extends to 40 art house theatres nationwide and offers a distribution platform for all Foundation-supported films. Sloan partners with Ensemble Studio Theatre and Manhattan Theatre Club in support of new science plays such as Photograph 51, the story of Rosalind Franklin and DNA, Headstrong about the unacknowledged personal toll of football concussions and the new adaptation of Henrik Ibsenʼs An Enemy of the People now on Broadway. For more information about the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation please visit www.sloan.org.
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