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Arts, Theater, Concerts, Film

 

 

 

For information on the Arts, Theater, Concerts, Film and other College events, go to the Events Calendar!

 

 


Fifth Annual TFMS Film Series

OUT OF BOUNDS: FEMINIST FILMS AND FILMMAKERS

 

February 6, 13, and 20

8:15 p.m., Cole Cinema, Campus Center

All screenings are free and open to the public.

 

Each filmmaker in this year’s series—Yun Suh ("City of Borders," February 6), Jenny Cool ("Home Economics," February 13), and Michèle Stephenson ("Faces of Change," February 20)—has distributed the film she will screen and discuss through the seminal feminist film collective, New Day Films (www.newday.com), which has just marked its 40th anniversary. Formed in 1971 by a small group of independent filmmakers who could find no non-theatrical distribution companies willing to distribute their feminist films, New Day was one of the first media collectives to self-distribute its work. With the efforts of founding members Julia Reichert, Jim Klein, Amalie Rothschild, and Liane Brandon, New Day’s films soon helped spread the women’s movement across the country.

 

Please join us for a celebration of women’s filmmaking and women's filmmaking collectives. Each screening is free and open to the public, and will be followed by a Q&A with the filmmaker.



YUN SUH

Monday, February 6

8:15 p.m., Cole Cinema

“City of Borders”

Director, producer, writer Yun Suh received training in media production while working as a journalist in broadcast radio and television news for over nine years. She is a founding member of “Apex Express” on KPFA Radio in Berkeley, Calif. (www.apexexpress.wordpress.com), a weekly hour-long magazine show profiling current affairs and arts in the Asian and Asian-American communities. Her journalism nominations include Best Radio Documentary for "Sabra & Shatilla" (2003) on the survivors of the 1982 massacre of Palestinians in Lebanese refugee camps, and an Emmy nomination for news feature, "Comfort Women" (2001), a story of an illiterate Korean woman who paints to break her 50-year silence on being forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese Imperial Army.

Prior to her career in journalism, Suh studied biology, psychology, and poetry at the University of California, Berkeley, where she has taught Arab, Asian, and African poetry. Suh’s own poetry has been anthologized in several books, including two volumes for the National Library of Poetry.

Co-president of Asian Women United (AWU) of California (www.asianwomenunited.org), a video production and publications collective of Asian-American women’s experiences and varied cultural heritages, Suh has recently produced Elaine Kim’s "Slaying the Dragon: Reloaded" (2011), a film on the representations of Asian women in the media. She is currently developing a documentary set in India.

"City of Borders" (2009) follows the underground community at the only gay bar in Jerusalem where people of opposing nationalities and religions create a sanctuary for people typically viewed as each other’s “enemy.” Set against the construction of the separation wall between Israel and the Palestinian territories and the struggle for a gay pride parade in the Holy City, five interwoven stories reveal the contradictions and complexities in the gay communities’ struggles for acceptance. The film premiered at the 2009 Berlin International Film Festival, where it won a special Teddy (Audience) Award, and was broadcast on PBS stations nationwide in 2010.



JENNY COOL
Monday, February 13
8:15 p.m., Cole Cinema

“Home Economics”

Jenny Cool is a social anthropologist and ethnographic filmmaker whose work focuses on cultural production and reproduction in the U.S. and on dominant social imaginaries, such as the American dream of homeownership and the narrative of social revolution through technology.

Born in the Philippines and raised in South and Southeast Asia, Cool has worked in new media since 1992 when she wrote and produced chapters for Evolution/Revolution, part of the Columbus Project, a milestone multimedia title now on permanent display at the Library of Congress. From 1993 to 2003, she lived and worked as a participant-observer in Cyborganic, an intentional community of web geeks whose members brought Wired magazine online, launched Hotwired, the first ad-supported online magazine, led the open source Apache project, and staffed and started dozens of Internet enterprises, including Craig's List, during the first phase of the web's development as a popular platform. She has produced web media for Simon and Schuster and Institute for the Future, was a senior producer at Netscape, and from 1999-2001 served as director of new media for Disney/ABC Cable Networks.

Cool’s fields of interest and scholarship include digital media, internet culture, ethnographic filmmaking, critical theories of representation, and feminist theory. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Visual Anthropology at the University of Southern California (USC), where she teaches video production in the M.A. program in visual anthropology. Cool holds a B.A. from Harvard, an M.A. in visual anthropology from USC, and a Ph.D. in anthropology, also from USC.

“Home Economics” (1994) takes an anthropological look at the American dream of homeownership in the suburban “edge city” of Antelope Valley, 55 miles outside of Los Angeles. In interviews, two working mothers and a teenager speak about their lives, touching on a range of issues, including racism, the meanings of home, family, and neighborhood, and the social and relational tolls of lengthy commutes. Author George Marcus has said of Cool’s film, “[A] wonderful piece of contemporary Americana. . . . This video constructs and documents . . . the self-delusive discourse in the contemporary reaches of distinctly American aspiration.”

Web links for Jenny Cool: http://cool.org/portfolio and http://coolstudios.com.

 


MICHÈLE STEPHENSON
Monday, February 20
8:15 p.m., Cole Cinema

“Faces of Change”

For over 15 years, Haitian-Panamanian filmmaker Michèle Stephenson has produced non-fiction film and new media, using her international experience as a human rights attorney to tackle stories on communities of color and human rights. In addition to feature-length documentary films, Stephenson has used video and the Internet to structure human rights campaigns and train people from across the globe in video Internet advocacy. Her work has appeared on PBS, Showtime, MTV, and other broadcast, cable, and digital outlets. She is co-founder with her partner, Joe Brewster, of Rada Film Group (www.radafilm.com), which produces and directs its own independent media, as well as works with companies and non-profit organizations to develop and produce new media for the web and narratives and documentaries for advocacy, broadcast, and theatrical release.  

Stephenson and her work have received numerous international honors, including the Diversity Award, SilverDocs International Documentary Film Festival; the Henry Hampton Award for Excellence in Film and Digital Media, Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary, Best Documentary, PATOIS: The New Orleans Human Rights Film Festival; Best Short Film, Montréal Haitian International Film Festival; and Best Film Directed by a Woman of Color, ADFF. Stephenson and Brewster are currently co-directing "An American Promise," a 12-year longitudinal documentary about the experiences of two African-American boys and their families at an elite prep school from kindergarten through high school graduation.  

"Faces of Change" (2005) highlights the story of five local activists from five different continents who relay unique video dispatches from their respective corners of the world. From their communities in Brazil, India, Mauritania, Bulgaria, and the United States, they go behind the camera to find a voice denied them because of their social, racial, gender, or ethnic background.

Aerial view of St. Mary's College of Maryland campus

St. Mary's College of Maryland
18952 E. Fisher Rd
St. Mary's City, MD 20686-3001
240-895-2000