York U’s Top Young Film Talent Shines at CineSiege

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TORONTO, September 29, 2008 -- CineSiege 08, York University’s 7th annual juried film showcase, brings outstanding student productions to Toronto’s Royal Cinema on October 20.

 

Sharing the silver screen will be five films – short fiction, provocative documentaries and cutting-edge alternative works – selected by five leading lights of the Canadian film and media scene. The winning titles will be announced at the event.

 

The jurors for this year’s program are Hussain Amarshi, founder and president of  Mongrel Media (releases include Academy Award-winners Lives of Others (2007) and The Counterfeiters (2008)]; Susan G. Cole, senior entertainment editor of NOW  magazine; award-winning documentary filmmaker Barry Greenwald (Between Two Worlds, Taxi!, Who Gets In?); video artist Deirdre Logue, development director at  Vtape; and Winnipeg indie filmmaker, writer and actor John Paizs (Marker, The Kids in the Hall, Crime Wave), currently director-in-residence at the Canadian Film Centre.

 

The jury made their selections from a shortlist of 22 nominees, chosen from a pool of 198 films produced last season by undergraduate students in York’s Film Department. In addition to genre winners, recognition is also given to exceptional achievement in specific creative/technical crafts of filmmaking such as cinematography, sound and editing.

 

“The wealth of talent in our program gave the jurors some really tough choices,” said York film department Chair Brenda Longfellow. “The audience at CineSiege can expect an evening of riveting cinema from this new generation of Canadian filmmakers.”

 

Jurors will be on hand at the screening to introduce the CineSiege picks and explain why they were chosen.

 

Making the cut at CineSiege is often a harbinger of great things to come. Many York student productions launched at CineSiege have gone on to screenings and honours at festivals around the world.

 

Such success stories include The School (2003) by Matthew Miller and Ezra Krybus, which has played at more than 25 fests and picked up awards including second place of 525 entries at the Manhattan Short Film Festival, best Canadian short at the   Atlantic Film Festival, and the gold plaque for best student narrative, Chicago International Film Festival. Hugh Gibson’s Hogtown Blues (2004) screened at the Toronto International Film Festival and Palm Springs International Short Film Festival as well as taking home the audience award at the 46th Bilbao Film Festival. Tess Girard’s Benediction (2005) won a special jury citation at the TIFF Group’s national student film showcase and the NFB’s Norman McLaren Award for best overall production at the 36th Canadian Student Film Festival in Montreal. Joyce Wong’s Banana Bruises (2006) was shown at the Hong Kong International Film Video Awards, San Francisco International Asian Film Festival and the closing night gala of the Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival. Jamie Cussen’s Rock Paper Scissors (2007) won Outstanding International Short at the Beijing International Student Short Film and Video Festival and screened as an official selection at the Austin and Atlantic international filmfests.

 

CineSiege is made possible through the generous support of Cinespace Film Studios. The event runs one night only, Mon. Oct. 20 at 7pm at the Royal, 608 College St. Admission is free.

For more information, visit Cinesiege 08 or call 416.736.2100 ext. 33592. 

 

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York University’s film department is one of Canada’s leading leading centre for professional education in the field. It offers hands-on studio training in all aspects of production, screenwriting and directing, combined with studies in film history, theory and criticism. Distinguished alumni include director/producer Larry Weinstein (Silk, Mozartballs, Beethoven’s Hair, The Music of Kurt Weill: September Songs, Thirty-Two Short Films about Glenn Gould); visual effects editor Tim Eaton (Beowulf, The Polar Express, Titanic); cinematographers Paul Sarossy (Adoration, Where the Truth Lies, Ararat) and Mark Irwin (Ace Ventura Jr., American Pie 2, Me, Myself & Irene); screenwriter and producer Robert Cooper (Stargate); and directors Aaron Woodley (Toronto Stories, Rhinoceros Eyes), Karen Shopsowitz (Canada’s War in Colour), Ali Kazimi (Rex Vs. Singh, Runaway Grooms, Continuous Journey), Bronwen Hughes (The L Word, Stander, Kids in the Hall), and Carl Bessai (Mothers&Daughters, Normal, Unnatural and Accidental).

 

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Clip reel available for media preview

 

Media Contact:
Amy Stewart, Communications, Faculty of Fine Arts, York University
416.650.8469  |  amy.stewart@yorku.ca