Tuesday, January 12, 2010

SKYLARC

The Survivors Project: Voices from the Inside-out! by Cabral "Larc" Trotman, will screen at the CaribbeanTales Youth Film Festival on Wednesday February 15th 2010 at 9.30am. The film explores the traumatic impact and implications of gun violence on young people and young black men in particular, living in low-income, racialized neighbourhoods. The film follows the story of a Grenadian born, ex-gang member from “The Town” in Rexdale, Toronto, Canada.

The son of Barbadian parents, Cabral Trotman was born in Toronto, and became interested in films during a grade 11 Media class, when he began to understand the importance of having a voice. That spark ignited his interest in Filmmaking which evolved to a responsibility to share stories and perspectives relevant to his community. The revelation spawned the birth of Skylarc a name he adopted as his own once he made his commitment to rhyming. When asked about the interpretation of his name he responded " The Skylark is known to originate from Africa, migrating to North America, hovering higher than all other song birds while singing the longest most versatile song". His persona as a artist from lyricist to filmmaker began to take flight. LARC is currently a Technical Officer for the Film Unit at the University of the West Indies, Barbados and is in production with his first Bajan drama "Back Shots".

Here LARC is interviewed by Patrice Benn, founder and CEO of BENN MEDIA GROUP, a boutique Marketing Company committed to supporting Arts and Culture. Based in Toronto and Barbados, BENN MEDIA GROUP offers consultation services and innovative marketing solutions for Events and Audio, Visual and Performing Art Products.

Patrice Benn: Can you tell me about how you ended up here at the Caribbean Tales Youth Film Festival and why it was important to show this particular film “The Survivors Project”


LARC: I was approached by Frances Anne Solomon as she is familiar with my work and she had a sense of what I was doing in Toronto with my workshops for youth in underprivileged, high risk communities. So I thought it would be a good fit since the main subject I followed for my piece was Grenadian-born who moved to Canada with his family as a youth.

I find the film often sparks discussion which to me is it’s intended purpose as well as to bring awareness to the impact of violence on mental health.

Patrice Benn: Before we get into how you do what you do, let’s talk a little bit about your background?

Larc: I was born here in Toronto but my parents are both Barbadian. We moved to Barbados after my Mom remarried. I was 9 years old then. I spent 7 years here before returning to Toronto. So I have some great Barbadian experiences to draw on, but I spent most of my life in Toronto to date.

Patrice Benn: So it’s safe to assume that you got your film training here in Toronto?

Larc: I went to Humber College and did the film program there. That’s not really where I got my start, but it’s where I made my first films. I really started at RAJE Film House in Toronto, so really and truly my training began there. This was a music video and commercials production company owned by Alison Duke and Jeremy Hood in Toronto. I was working in the industry with them on videos and commercials so my introduction to the craft and art of film was really there. I always big up RAJE any chance I get. It was a movement for Black Film in Canada that I felt impacted tons of people at the time.

Patrice Benn: So how does coming from a city like Toronto influence your work?

Larc: Growing up in Toronto I actually started out in Hip Hop. I see Hiphop as the artistic expression of ghetto youth living in the hood. This really informs my work if you really take a look. My ancestors are also huge to me, from the Caribbean straight to Afrika. You can go to certain jams in Toronto or look at a music video, I’m sure you might think it might’ve been shot in Jamaica ot Trinidad or sumthin. Blacks in Toronto have alotta love for the Caribbean I find. It’s also part of our expression as a people, it’s mixed up in there. Even blacks from the continent get caught up just because the influence of the Caribbean is so strong at school. Mix this with some Hip-hop and the Toronto black youth is pretty much born for the most part. So I’m not unique really, just one of many and my work is informed by these experiences.


The Survivor's Project: Voices from the Inside-out! 1 of 3


The Survivor's Project: Voices from the Inside-out! 2 of 3
Patrice Benn: So where are you now? What are you up to?

LARC: I moved to Barbados three years ago. A film movement is growing here, and I wanted to be a part of building it. I currently work at the Errol Barrow Center for Creative Imagination at the University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus in Barbados.The program also does Dance, Theatre , Music and so on.

Patrice Benn: What are you doing there?

LARC: I’m a Technical Officer for the Film Unit. However outside of my work at the University, I also facilitate workshops, shoot documentaries and more recently now drama. In Barbados, there’s alot of room still for further growth and development, still trying to work out the kinks, garner support and so on. I’m just glad to be a part of it. Expect big things from us in the near future. We’re really trying to position ourselves as a go to spot for Film in the Caribbean.

Patrice Benn: Is there any special projects in the mix cause it seems like you got your hands full from the sounds of things. Any thing you’re working on in Barbados at the moment?

LARC: Yeah… there’s this film I’m currently making called ‘Back Shots’ - a drama. It’s looking at the issue of sexual assault and its set in Cave Hill which is also where the university is located. It’s not uncommon to hear stories about women being assaulted in different ways in that area, in Barbados in general. It's the hidden side of the culture. I lived in the ghetto region of Cave Hill for a year and a half before I started writing the piece. Didn’t wanna miss the mark and flop on my first Bajan film, not a cool look, so I did my studies. It’s an issue that the country is trying to address so I felt like it was worth my while telling this type of story.

Patrice Benn: Wow that’s a title?!

LARC: Yeah…. I gave the name a lot of thought, Hahaha!!....ummm the ‘Back Shot’ to me is more the ‘back-stab’, the betrayal, but playing on the gun as opposed to the knife. Hence the ‘shot’ being used instead, the gun being the weapon of choice in this piece while still commenting on the sexual act itself as it pertained to the assault. It’s kinda packed with meaning to me, which is what I need. Rappers might get the title more quickly Hahaha!

Patrice Benn: So what excites you about Caribbean Film today?

Larc: I think really it's being a part of defining what that is and what that will become in the future. Most of the approaches or philosophies to filmmaking are already established in other parts of the world, in North America they have their model and their process fundamentally which is the ‘Studio’ for the most part. They have a particular methodology you know, same thing for Asia, India, Africa... I think the Caribbean’s next! There’s a movement toward establishing a Caribbean Film Industry and the wheels are definitely in motion. As the work gets stronger and we start to tell better stories while staying true to the Caribbean aesthetic which will ultimately inform an all new film language. This is the key that will differentiate ourselves from the current marketplace. So I’m front and center, and I hope to put in my 2 cents for what it’s worth, when and where I can. It’s not just about me making Caribbean films, but training as well. This is where the real building takes place I think.

Patrice Benn: What were the challenges that you faced when creating Backshots.


Larc: The film was a part of an Arts Education Initiative as well, which comes back to my point about building. At this stage in our development we really wanted to enhance capacity by transferring skills and providing opportunities. You know, the Spike Lee model, or Clair Prieto model if we’re talking Toronto, where someones’ always being trained or given an opportunity. I got support from the National Cultural Foundation here in Barbados and the Errol Barrow Centre at the University. I also got people from the neighborhood and mixed them with film students and gave them opportunities to work in front and behind the camera. So we’re building as a community. It great and it’s something I plan to continue with as a model for Skylarc Pictures. But getting back to your question, um: It was challenging in that there was a learning curve for the trainees and that curve caused us to slow down a bit you know so our days were longer, especially on a low-budget independent film like mine. My DP Stan Barua who’s also from Toronto said the number one thing he took from this production was patience. Hahaha …but at the end of the day, we’re just starting, he understood that and it’s been fun.

PB: True, true well said. Finally, I’ve been dying to ask; what was it like working with CaribbeanTales Director Frances Anne Solomon on the Back Shots film? Is that how you met?

Larc: Well, um, I think she had not too long come on board as a Visiting Lecturer at the Errol Barrow Centre and, I told her about the project and she asked if I had a Producer, so I told her no smiling inside. She initially just wanted to come on board as a Producer Consultant cause she’s mad busy herself, but after taking in the project and identifying what the film needed she really took the helm, mobilizing everyone and everything, she really gave the project wheels and got it going. So yeah she’s a trooper and I thank her for her help on the project. Putting "Caribbean Tales" on film is a huge passion of hers obviously, and I think she saw this as an opportunity to put another check mark on the list. I’m not a bad horse to bet on I don’t think. So she gave her time and energy, very valuable resources. She’s my big sis now, film comrades from Toronto so it’s great. Hahaha!!

Patrice Benn: Frances Ann Solomon always the get it done lady. Larc, I want to thank you for taking some time out to tell us about your projects, your experiences and your upcoming Arts Workshops. I’m sure the talented youth of the Caribbean will truly benefit from your specialized training in the region. Please keep up the fantastic work and we look forward to all the updates.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Invitation - Come to Barbados!



(Click on image to enlarge)

Come and join us as we celebrate...

The Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival & Symposium

Date: Tuesday February 23rd to Tuesday March 2nd 2010

The festival will feature:

A Symposium on Global Distribution co-hosted by One Caribbean Media.

A Film Market co-hosted by the Shridath Ramphal Center UWI, Cave Hill.

Workshops and Master Classes co-hosted with The Caribbean Film and Media Academy, the Caribbean Channel, and The Barbados Film and Video Association.

Film screenings nightly at the Olympus VIP Theaters.

Look forward very much to seeing you there!
 

Frances-Anne Solomon
Artistic Director, Founder
_______________
The Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival and Symposium will feature an impressive selection of the best Caribbean films from around the world.

WHEN: February 24th - March 2nd 2010 @ 7:30 p.m. and 9:30PM Daily
at Olympus Theatres, Sheraton Mall

SEE OUR SELECTION OF FILMS below

Features
Africa Unite by Stephanie Black
Calypso Dreams by Geoffrey Dunn
Carmen and Geoffrey by Linda Atkinson and Nick Doob
Nurse.Fighter.Boy. by Charles OfficerRain by Maria Govan
Solitary Alchemist by Mariel Brown
The Rosa Parks Story by Julie Dash
Tribes by Ras Kassa
A Winter Tale by Frances-Anne Solomon

Monday, January 4, 2010

Legendary Canadian talents will be honoured at The CaribbeanTales Youth Film Festival’s Gala Award Ceremony




Toronto – January 4th 2010

For Immediate Release

A number of celebrated African Canadian filmmakers will be honoured at a Special Gala Awards Ceremony on Thursday January 21st 2010, as part of the 2nd CaribbeanTales Youth Film Festival - Celebrating Black History Month.

Founded by award-winning filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon, the festival screens Africentric films for audiences of high school and university students. This year’s festival highlights the works of African-Canadian directors and producers and celebrates this burgeoning sector of Canadian film culture.

CaribbeanTales Youth Film Festival 2010 Gala Launch honourees and award recipients include Claire Prieto-Fuller, Fil Fraser, Sudz Sutherland and Jennifer Holness, and Hubert Davis. The ceremony will take place at the William Doo Auditorium, (45 Willcocks Avenue.) at 6 p.m.

Legendary Canadian producer Claire Prieto-Fuller will be honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award, which she will accept in person. Known as a ferocious advocate and supporter of African Canadian and diverse filmmaking over her 35-year career, Prieto-Fuller's extensive film and television experience has made her respected figure among filmmakers and producers across the country who have worked with her and benefitted from her vision and professionalism. She has produced a range of films from ground-breaking shorts to studio features, was the founding Producer of the National Film Board of Canada's Studio D program, and Founding President of the Black Film and Video Network, has worked as a much sought after Production Manager and Line Producer on numerous Canadian television programs, and selflessly mentored dozens of emerging (and now established) Canadian filmmakers. Prieto-Fuller's film and television credits include: How She Move, Echo, Lord Have Mercy!, Raizin' Kane, Exhibit A, Love Songs, Survivors, Some Black Women, It's not an Illness, Home to Buxton.

Also receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award is life-long broadcaster, journalist, television program director, and radio, television and feature film producer Fil Fraser. Fraser is one of the most experienced producers working in Canada today, having built his career and his life in the mainstream of Canadian politics and media, while never losing touch with the communities he sprang from. His wide and varied career has included Vice Chair of Telefilm Canada, Founding President of Vision TV, founding publisher of the Regina Weekly Mirror and host of ITV Television’s Fil Fraser Show in the 1970's. He wrote, produced and directed several educational films for television, including one of Canada's most successful feature films WHY SHOOT THE TEACHER in 1974, MARIE ANNE in 1977 and THE HOUNDS OF NOTRE DAME in 1980, all of which were award winners, receiving both theatrical and television release. “Fil”, as he is affectionately known, is currently an adjunct professor of Communications Studies at Athabasca University, and continues to write books including most recently Running Uphill, on the Olympic sprinter Harry Jerome.

In addition to Prieto-Fuller and Fraser, CaribbeanTales will pay tribute to another trailblazing pair in African-Canadian film and television – the multi-talented husband and wife team of Sudz Sutherland and Jennifer Holness. Most recently recognised for co-writing (with each other), directing (Sutherland), and producing (Holness) the epic CBC prime-time mini-series Guns, starring Colm Fiore, Sudz and Jen's other credits include the TV movie DoomsTown, theei breakthrough feature film Love Sex and Eating the Bones, and the short films My Father's Hands and AfricVille. They will be the joint recipients of the CaribbeanTales' Cultural Entrepreneur of the Year Award.

Academy-nominated filmmaker Hubert Davis will also be at the Gala ceremony to receive his Excellence Award. Davis's first film Hardwood, earned him an Academy Award nomination, while his most recent and critically acclaimed feature Invisible City earned him the prize for Best Canadian documentary at last year's Hot Docs festival. Both films will be screened at the Gala Launch and Davis will be on hand after the screenings for a Talk Back session with the audience.

Other African-Canadian films and filmmakers whose work will be featured at this year's Youth Film Festival and who will be attending the Launch include Charles Officer, whose beautiful feature Nurse Fighter Boy has received rave reviews, Dawn Wilkinson, director of Devotion and winner of last year's WIFT Emerging Director Award. Alison Duke's poignant documentary The Woman I have Become....Lucky Ejim and Jude Idada's The Tenant, that has recently taken Nigerian screens by storm, Sylvia Hamilton's important documentary on Black schools The Little Black School House, Frances-Anne Solomon, Powys Dewhurst, Nicole Brooks, Kim Dominique Ferguson, Louis Taylor, Trey Anthony, "Larc" Cabral Trotman, Ricardo Scipio, and Lana Lovell.

Festival Founder Frances-Anne Solomon is an accomplished filmmaker, writer, director and producer, whose most recent, critically acclaimed feature film A Winter Tale has received international recognition. She is the President and Artistic Director of the two companies she founded: Leda Serene Films and CaribbeanTales.

The CaribbeanTales Youth Film Festival - Celebrating Black History Month is produced by CaribbeanTales in association with The Caribbean Studies Program and New College at the University of Toronto; The Ontario Multi-Cultural History Society; and with the financial support of the Department of Canadian Heritage through Canadian Culture Online.

CaribbeanTales is an innovative multimedia company that creates, markets and distributes educational films, videos, radio programs, audio books, theatre plays, websites and events, that showcase the rich heritage of the Caribbean and it’s Diaspora.

CaribbeanTales’ mandate is to foster and encourage intercultural understanding and citizen participation through the medium of film, contributing to an inclusive Canadian society.

Available for interviews:
Frances-Anne Solomon, Artistic Director and Founder

Ticket information:
Single screening tickets $10
Teachers Free.
Please contact Miki Nembhard for special group rates. 416 598 1410.

image002For media inquires, please contact:
Pennant Media Group
Kevin Pennant kp@pennantmediagroup.com
Tel: 416.596.2978

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Barbados to host 'Best of CaribbeanTales'

From the Jamaica Gleaner

Published: Wednesday | December 16, 2009

by Mel Cooke, Gleaner Writer

Following its strong presence across the region last year with the feature film, A Winter Tale, CaribbeanTales, the Canada-based multimedia company run by Frances-Anne Solomon, will be holding the 'Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival and Symposium' in Barbados.

Officially launched in Bridgetown last Tuesday, the event includes a one-day symposium on Global Distribution, a film Market, workshops, master classes and educational screenings. It runs from February 23 to March 10 at the Olympus Cinema, Sheraton Centre and at University of the West Indies, Cave Hill campus.

In an email interview, Solomon said the response to the launch "was overwhelmingly positive", emphasising the importance of the teamwork that is giving the festival a boost.

"One of the most positive aspects of the festival is the strength of the partnerships that we have forged this year. Alongside One Caribbean (the largest media company in the region) which will be co-hosting the Symposium on Global Distribution, UWI's Shridath Ramphal Center, that will co-host a film Market at the festival, and the Barbados Film and Video Association, that will host a workshop at the festival, we also have a stellar core team comprising Mary Wells (Jamaica), Mitzi Allen (Antigua), and Lisa Wickham (Trinidad), that will assist me in the programming, management and promotion of the festival," she said.

Weighing options
She said Barbados was chosen as the host country for three reasons - "it is central, accessible and beautiful and "we expect many people from all over the world to attend because of this location ...".

There is, however, the possibility that the 'Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival and Symposium' will move around the region, as Solomon said, "in the future we are exploring other islands as possible locations. We have had a number of offers and are weighing options."

She pointed out that, "it's a regional event, and so will bring together people from around the region. It will bring lots of international visitors to the region. It will bring everybody together to strategise about how to create an international vision."

The symposium on Global Distribution takes place on February 24, with the first ever Caribbean Film Market on the following day.

Solomon said the new associate directors are "people who I worked with over the past years, whose work I admire greatly, and with whom I share a vision and commitment to developing an industry that serves the needs of our films and those of the Caribbean film industry as a whole."

Adding, "I have known Mary Wells for several years and she is quietly a very talented, generous and visionary person. You need all these qualities to hold a vision that includes all of our movies and the whole industry. Lisa Wickham is an extraordinary businesswoman and fantastic public relations person, who also has a big picture of what we need to achieve to sit on the world stage as filmmakers and as an industry. And Mitzi Allen is a pioneer and warrior."

The 'Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival and Symposium' caps off CaribbeanTales' first five years and Solomon said the company "has exceeded my expectations 100 fold. The growth of the company has, luckily for us, mirrored the growth in interest in the Caribbean and its brand, and so we have seemed to ride that wave, at the same time, I believe, as contributing to it".

"The low points have been, as always, trying to raise money. The high points have been connecting with like-minded people from all over the world to do something that helps everyone, and makes all of us special and feel useful and good," she said.

"The projection for the next five years is to take Caribbean film to the international stage and establish it as a brand alongside Hollywood, Bollywood and the British film industry, in terms of quality, viability and audience reach. In order to do this, we have to develop a business model for production and distribution that draws on skills and the help of all stakeholders: government, private sector, broadcasters, distributors, and cinema owners, to make it work," she said.

"That is what we are on course to achieve in the next five years."

Photos: (top to bottom) Frances-Anne Solomon, Mary Wells, Lisa Wickham, Mitzi Allen.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Frances-Anne Solomon's acclaimed movie A WINTER TALE, starring Peter Williams and Leonie Forbes, makes it's Canadian Television Premiere on Bravo!

Toronto – December 11th 2009

Following a string of successful North American festival premieres, theatrical releases, and international awards Frances-Anne Solomon’s acclaimed feature film A Winter Tale comes to television audiences across Canada. The film, which features a talented ensemble cast led by Canadian star Peter Williams, rising Toronto actor Michael Miller, and famed Jamaican actrsss and Gemini nominee Leonie Forbes, will have its Canadian television premiere on Bravo! Canada on December 17th at 9pm.

Written, directed and produced by Frances-Anne Solomon, A Winter Tale tells the moving story of a Black men's support group that forms at a local Caribbean takeaway restaurant after a young boy is killed by a stray bullet. With a plot that sensitively explores the psychological effects of the universally relevant issues of urban "Black on Black" violence, the film beautifully captures the day-to-day emotional struggles of this group of men, and a community under seige.

Over the past 18 months A Winter Tale has travelled the world, garnering rave reviews and international recognition through film festivals and cinema releases in Toronto, Montreal, Halifax, New York, Los Angeles Africa, the Caribbean, and the UK.

Most recently it won recognition at Fespaco (Africa's Oscars held biannually in Burkina Faso, West Africa). Other awards include Outstanding Canadian Feature Film Award at the ReelWorld Film Festival, as well as the top awards at the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival, the Zuma International Film Festival (Nigeria), and many others.

A Winter Tale was developed through a collaborative improvisational process by Vancouver-based theatre director Michele Lonsdale Smith and Frances-Anne Solomon, working together with an extraordinary team of experienced and emerging Canadian and international actors, including Trinidad and Tobago's Dennis "Sprangalang" Hall, and Canada's Valerie Buhagiar.
* * * * * * * * *

SELECTED REVIEWS OF A WINTER TALE:

Caribbean Release - 2008

Television stars in Antigua for debut of acclaimed film - 19 May 2008
The Trinidad Guardian -Online Edition Ver 2.0 - May 18, 2008
A Caribbean filmmaker - May 18th 2008
`A Winter Tale` To Open In Trinidad & Tobago - May 12, 2008
Winter Tale cast arrives for premiere - May 9 2008
Tale of Racism and Healing - May 3 2008
‘A Winter Tale’ impresses Jamaica audiences - April 13, 2008
'A Winter Tale' tells of manly chill - Jamaica Gleaner, Jamaica - April 9 2008
Peter Williams finds 'Wright' role in 'A Winter Tale - April 6, 2008'
'A Winter Tale' makes Jamaican debut - Jamaica Gleaner, Jamaica - April 6 2008
Peter Williams finds 'Wright' role in 'A Winter Tale' - Jamaica Gleaner, Jamaica - April 5 2008
'Winter' in April - Jamaica Gleaner, Jamaica - April 5 2008
‘Winter Tale’ makes TT debut - Trinidad News, Trinidad and Tobago - April 1 2008
Leonie Forbes - On becoming myself - Jamaica Gleaner, Jamaica - March 30 2008
A Winter Tale, starring Leonie Forbes, heads to Jamaican theatres - February 28, 2008
Trinidadian Migrant`s Film Makes BAM Screening Again - February26, 2008

Canada Press
Film examines poverty, gun crime - The Guardian - Etobicoke, 07 February 2008
Something to talk out - Toronto Sun, 04 February 2008
Watching and talking about violence in Toronto - February 5, 2008
A Winter Tale Tells Our Story - Community Contact - August 30 2007
Stepping Up in A Time Of Sorrow - Montreal Gazette - August 29 2007
Capsule Reviews of Selected 2007 WFF Films - Montreal Gazette - August 24 2007

World Premiere of A Winter Tale
Expose - A Winter Tale is pure fireworks

A Winter Tale: An Interview with Frances-Anne Solomon - April 9 2007
This Weekend "A Winter Tale" opens at Rainbow Cinema Woodbine ...
A Winter Tale - The Movie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Flickr: Photos from frances-anne solomon
A Winter Tale by Frances-Anne Solomon’s Vox :::::: VUVOX
Today@York: A Winter Tale screening - Confronting violence through ...
More News: Free screening of A Winter Tale will be followed by an ...
The Movie that is creating a buzz in Toronto, A Winter Tale
Weather is right for A Winter Tale
WE FILM - A WINTER TALE

*****************

Frances-Anne Solomon is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, director and producer. She is the president and artistic director of the two companies she founded: Leda Serene Films and CaribbeanTales, and has also worked as a film and television drama producer for the BBC.

Recent projects include A Winter Tale (for Telefilm Canada/CHUM Television); Heart Beat (Bravo!) which profiles Caribbean musical creators; Literature Alive, a multi-facetted multimedia project profiling Caribbean authors; and the Gemini-nominated Lord Have Mercy!, Canada's landmark multicultural sitcom, for Vision TV, Toronto1, APTN and Showcase.

Peter Williams, Jamaican-Canadian film and television star, plays Gene in A Winter Tale. Williams' film credits include Catwoman, Chronicles of Riddick and Stargate SG-1.

Leonie Forbes has graced the silver screen in major Hollywood pictures, performed in dozens of theatrical productions, and has worked as a radio broadcaster and programmer in Jamaica. Her selected credits include:Old Story Time, Arawak Gold, Champagne and Sky Juice, and Smile Orange. Her film and television credits include: Shattered Image, Milk and Honey, Passion and Paradise, What My Mother Told Me, and Children of Babylon.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Dawn Wilkinson's Devotion


Producer Bobie Taffe and her team produced this video profile of filmmaker Dawn Wilkinson whose feature film Devotion is being screened at the CaribbeanTales Youth Film Festival.

View "Dawn Wilkinson - Devotion" from Frances-Anne Solomon on Vimeo.

SWEET DEVOTION: During her final year of a BA in Women’s Studies and African Studies at U of T in 1996, Dawn Wilkinson took a one-week filmmaking workshop in Mount Forest, Ontario, that persuaded her to pursue a life behind the camera. The young writer had been crafting plenty of fiction and literary criticism in her classes, but, at the screening of her five-minute film, she was floored by the “immediacy” of the response. “Seeing people connect to my story was something I’d never fully experienced with my writing.”

In 1999, Wilkinson studied at the Canadian Film Centre Directors’ Lab in Toronto. She also served as a director observer (in which a young filmmaker-hopeful watches an established pro at work) during the shooting of the movie Hurricane, with director Norman Jewison (BA 1949 VIC). Wilkinson had established the production company, Afterlife, in 1998, and has since made four short films, as well as several documentaries.

Her first feature, Devotion, recently won the Audience Award at the 2005 Reel World Film Festival in Toronto. The movie explores the concerns of belonging and alienation facing an 11-year-old biracial girl. Alice, the main character, also struggles with her mother’s death, caused by her father’s drunk driving. “The plot is not about being biracial; it’s about her not fitting in at school, about not getting along with her dad. Being biracial is the lens she’s looking through,” says Wilkinson. “I wanted to show that complexity: how she saw herself wasn’t how she was seen by others.”Reprinted from the University of Toronto Magazine.


More Clips from Devotion:

Dawn Wilkinson’s “Devotion” Trailer

Dawn Wilkinson Interview for“Devotion”

Fight Scene from Dawn Wilkinson's "Devotion

Alice and Grant from Dawn Wilkinson's "Devotion"

The Sally scene from Dawn Wilkinson's "Devotion"

Ja Ganesha from Dawn Wilkinson's "Devotion"

Halloween Scene from Dawn Wilkinson’s “Devotion”

More about Dawn Wilkinson

More about Devotion

AfterLife Films Youtube Channel including interviews with Dawn and clips from "Devotion"

Devotion Offical Website

Dawn Wilkinson's website

Monday, December 7, 2009

Best of CaribbeanTales 2010 : Film Festival and Symposium

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The creative industries of film and television will receive a boost this February when CaribbeanTales, a Toronto-based multimedia company, brings together formidable local, regional and international partners to showcase, discuss and promote Caribbean film at “THE BEST OF CARIBBEANTALES FILM FESTIVAL AND SYMPOSIUM” that will take place at the Olympus Cinema, Sheraton Center and at UWI Cave Hill from February 23rd to March 2nd, 2010. The Festival kicked off with a Media Launch on December 8, 2009 at 1.30pm at the Errol Barrow Center for Creative Imagination, UWI Cave Hill.

The event’s Director is accomplished Toronto-based Trinidadian filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon, whose most recent award-winning feature film A Winter Tale has won international acclaim, and who has been a visiting lecturer at UWI. She said: “February is Black History Month and it is fitting for us to mark this with a celebration of film, to start the year with a bang and to push the discussion forward about how we can create here a sustainable and profitable industry”.

The festival is incredibly proud to partner with a number of local organisations including One Caribbean Media, that will co-host a Symposium on Global Distribution; the Shridath Ramphal Center at UWI, that will co-host a Film Market at the Festival; and the Barbados Film and Video Association, whose president Penelope Hynam said: “I am delighted that Barbadian audiences will get to see some of the wonderful films we saw at the Caribbean Tales Festival in Toronto this year, including a fantastic cross section of work by our most important filmmakers from around the Diaspora.”

This year 2010 the CaribbeanTales Film Festival welcomes 3 new Associate Directors who will work alongside Solomon to program, manage and promote the festival: Jamaican filmmaker Mary Wells, whose first feature film Kingston Paradise, recently wrapped production, and is destined for screens later in the year, joins the festival’s management team as the Co-ordinator of the Barbados event. Trinidad-based Producer-Director-TV Personality Lisa Wickham, CEO of E-Zone Entertainment, and Director of the Caribbean Film and Media Academy, (CFMA) will assist with the event production. The CFMA will also host a number of workshops as part of the festival activities. And Mitzi Allen, CEO and Co-owner of HAMA TV in Antigua, also joins the Festival as an Associate Director. HAMA will be covering the Festival, and will be seeking to bring a delegation of OECS producers to Toronto in June.

SYMPOSIUM ON GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION: Hosted jointly by One Caribbean Media and Caribbean Tales, the 1-day Symposium will feature a presentation by OCM Group CEO Terrence Farrell as well as contributions by leading international players in the distribution field.

FILM MARKET: Modelled on the Rotterdam Cinemart, and hosted jointly with the Shridath Ramphal Center at UWI, Cave Hill, selected independent producers will have an opportunity to pitch their projects and have one-on-one meetings with regional and international film and TV buyers, broadcasters, cinema owners, and government representatives.

WORKSHOPS, MASTER CLASSES, EDUCATIONAL SCREENINGS: The Festival in partnership with the Caribbean Film and Media Academy and UltimaxTV will host a number of master classes and workshops including "Lighting and Camera Operation for Film and Video" conducted by UK Cinematograher Lincoln Ascott. The Barbados Film and Video Association will host a workshop at the festival, and there will be educational screenings for high school students, alongside a week of public screenings of some of the best Caribbean and Black international feature films and shorts to be produced in recent years.

The CaribbeanTales Film Festival is North America’s only standalone festival showcasing the best of Caribbean cinema from around the world. Founded by Frances-Anne Solomon, the festival has survived, grown and thrived in the highly competitive Canadian festival scene, to become a notable event in the city’s calendar. “For our 5th anniversary we have planned a number of exciting events and initiatives to promote Caribbean film and TV, including a presence at Cannes 2010. It seemed fitting that we kick off this extraordinary year with a discussion in the Caribbean and Barbados is dynamic, central and accessible.”

Contact: Frances-Anne Solomon/ Monique Young
BestofCaribbeanTales.wordpress.com