Every fall for the past twenty-odd years, the Lausanne Underground Film & Music Festival has occupied the Casino de Montbenon and various other places in Lausanne, Switzerland. During five days, the festival commits to offering an avant-garde and outside of the mainstream artistic programme, combining films screenings, sound performances, workshops, exhibitions, and book launches.
Extended Call – The Experimental Film & Video CompetitionThe 26th Tel-Aviv International Student Film Festival
We are delighted to invite you - Independent filmmakers, graduate students and students in their last year, to submit your recent films to the 2024 Experimental Film & Video Competition.
Shirley Erbacher was a denizen of the Hyde Park Arts Center, a longtime employee of the Chicago Public Library, and a small-gauge filmmaker creating lively and deeply personal work from 1965-1972. Her handcrafted, silent films include portraits of family, children at play, Chicago landscapes, and public art. Join us for a screening of all 14 of her known films on the original 8mm format.
Call for submissions for the fifth edition of Altered Images is now open!!Submit your films! We're looking forward to watching new great material.
Seize the early bird discount opportunity and become part of our ever-growing festival, fostering a unique networking experience for talented filmmakers and artists.
This programme explores the influence and revisiting of Margaret Tait’s cinema by means of 16-mm filming, carried out by a group of contemporary filmmakers related with her work, such as Ute Aurand, Peter Todd and Luke Fowler. Alex Pirie defined Tait’s work as bricolage of past, present and imagination, which is where this constellation is formed.
In the Waves: Films for Our Grief Screening Program + Q&A with Malo Sutra Fish AgX Film Collective, 144 Moody Street, Building 18, 2nd Floor, Waltham, MA 02453 February 17, 2024 | Doors open at 7pm, program starts at 7:30pm Event website: https://agxfilm.org/events/2024/2/17/in-the-waves
The opening stanza of Derek Walcott's Names slices through waves breaking on the windward side of Barbados, the landing point for the first black slave society: “A sea eagle screams from the rock, and my race began like the osprey, with that cry, that terrible vowel, that I.” Travelling inland from the shore, the narrator of Helen Cammock's essay film—always speaking in the first person, whether as herself or as the embodiment of other voices (from writers to emigrants)—searches for the last vestiges of the sugar trade, a colonial project in freefall.