UFVA Wrap-up and Ryan Coogler

One of the things I have always enjoyed most about the annual University Film and Video Association Conference is talking with colleagues.  I become reinvigorated about teaching and filmmaking, learn so much, and just enjoy socializing.

During the conference I tweeted something about the plenary speaker – Peter Debruge, features editor and senior film critic for Variety – and composed my first post on my phone.  Those are likely to be infrequent!  The screen is so small!  The WordPress app can be a little wonky!

The talk was generally good, but Debruge said several things that irritated me.  One of them was that he didn’t like Fruitvale Station because it didn’t seem like a narrative to him.  I looked online but can’t access his initial review since I’m not a Variety subscriber.  I wish he had explained the remark, but he didn’t.

Curiously, later on, Debruge said that the most important function of film is to make us feel something.  Hmmmmm…  I cannot reconcile these two comments.  But, you already know how I feel about Ryan Coogler’s feature debut.  It satisfies me as a narrative, and I most definitely felt something when I saw it.

After the plenary session, I was chatting with my friend Linda Brown, USC Cinematography professor.  She told me about meeting Coogler when he joined her class and following his progress as a film student through graduation.

I won’t repeat what she said because they are personal stories, but I hope he remains as focused and humble in the wake of this film as he was as a student.  Time will tell, I suppose, about those attributes, but his talent, from my perspective, is intact.

Ryan Coogler

Wake Forest Graduates Present at UFVA

One of the most exciting things about this particular University Film and Video Association Conference (at Chapman University July 29-August 3, 2013) is watching my former students present their work.  I am so proud of all of them.

Peter Carolla (MFA ’13) is one of six Graduate Fellows at this year’s conference.  He made a presentation about his background and how that influences his work as a documentary filmmaker then showed a trailer for the thesis film he produced with Nick Gooler and Hillary Pierce, The One Who Builds (http://theonewhobuilds.wordpress.com).

Peter

J.S. Mayank (MA from a year I do not readily recall and better known to us as Mayank Gupta) screened his short film EMIT (https://vimeo.com/47221924) and will also have a SCRIPT session.  His session was held in a room so cold that I took a photo of the man wrapped in the pink towel instead of one of Mayank!  Oops!

Towel

Sam Smartt (MFA ’13) and Chris Zaluski (MFA ’13) screened their thesis film Wagonmasters (http://www.wagonmastersthemovie.com) and, in a funny twist of fate, it screened with Elon University colleague Nicole Triche’s film The Taxidermists after both films appeared in the same program at the RiverRun International Film Festival earlier this year.

Sam and Chris

Sana Haq (MFA ’13) will present two films at the conference.  This photo is from the Q & A following the screening of her film The Other Army, which is a Carole Fielding Grant Award Winner, and later today she will screen Wicked Silence (http://www.wickedsilencefilm.com), her thesis film produced with Jessica Pic.

Sana