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Matteo Garrone, director of “Gomorrah,” returns to the Cannes Film Festival with “Reality,” an indictment of reality television.

WASHINGTON (Aug. 15, 2007)–A quiet, unassuming, young Native American woman competes to represent her nation in the most traditional of all beauty pageants. A gang of Mexican wrestlers dons colorful costumes and formulates colorful rhetoric to take on the slumlords and bureaucrats that threaten their communities. A humble Aymara farmer makes an unlikely bid to become the first indigenous Bolivian president on a pro-coca platform. These stories and more converge to bring audiences the contemporary tales of indigenous and under-represented minority cultures in the fourth annual National Geographic All Roads Film Festival, to be held Sept. 27-30 at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles and Oct. 4-7 at the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C. The four-day event will also feature a walk-through photography exhibit and music concert in both cities. In Washington, the event will include an art market.
Some of this year’s stand-out films include “Super Amigos,” a feature documentary by Arturo Pérez Torres that combines live-action with comic-book-style animation to depict a group of Lucha Libre wrestlers who have taken their fight to the streets of Mexico City, and “Miss Navajo,” a feature documentary by All Roads seed grantee Billy Luther (Navajo/Hopi/Laguna Pueblo), that follows the contestants of the Miss Navajo Nation competition.
Exclusive to Washington, D.C., the heralded films “Enemies of Happiness,” by filmmakers Eva Mulvad and Anja Al-Erhayem, and “Cocalero,” by director Alejandro Landes, will show the political process from two separate perspectives, as an Iraqi woman and an indigenous Aymara coca farmer endure racist and sexist insults, and sometimes death threats, in a quest to attain public office.
“The theme for this year’s festival, ‘New Voices, First Stories,’ exemplifies our mission to identify and promote the work of up-and-coming filmmakers, photographers and musicians who have fascinating stories to tell about their cultures and communities,” said Francene Blythe, director of the All Roads Film Project. “To overlook these stories is to ignore a vital part of our history as a global community, and thus All Roads will always seek out these films and make them accessible to a broader audience.”
This year’s festival will present four programming strands: “Women Hold Up Half the Sky,” a spotlight on women filmmakers; “Ancestors, Elders and Land,” highlighting the connection between native people and their land; “Under the Same Sun,” a look at the struggle that people endure as they confront dual cultural identities; and “Shorts from Around the World,” a showcase of short-subject films depicting a wide array of global cultures. Films represent a diverse range of countries and cultures, including Afghanistan, Australia, Bolivia, Canada, Finland, India, Iran, Iraq, Kurdistan, Mexico, New Zealand, Tonga (South Pacific Islands), Turkey and the United States.
All Roads will feature the world premiere of “A Shout Into the Wind,” by seed grantee Katja Gauriloff (Skolt Sámi). U.S. debuts include “Waban-Aki,” by First Nation filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin; “Crocodile Dreaming,” by Aboriginal director Darlene Johnson (seed grantee); “Daf,” by Kurdish filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi; “Hush,” by Aboriginal director Dena Curtis; “Land & Airwaves,” by First Nations filmmakers Patrick Boivin and Alland Flamand; “My Brother Vinnie,” by Aboriginal director Steven McGregor; “Nana,” by Aboriginal filmmaker Warwick Thornton; “Taua,” by Maori director Tearepa Kahi (seed grantee); and “Tavake,” by South Pacific Islander Paul Stoll.
Premiering in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., are features “Dol,” by Kurdish director Hiner Saleem, and “Four Sheets to the Wind,” by Native American director and seed grantee Sterlin Harjo (Seminole/Creek). Shorts “Menged,” by Ethiopian director Daniel Taye Workou, and “133 Skyway,” by Native American filmmaker Randy Redroad, will also make their local debuts.
This year’s photography program highlights the works of Kashmiri photographer Altaf Qadri, whose photo essay “Kashmir: Paradise in Pain” depicts the toll the Indian occupation of Kashmir has taken upon its people; Israeli photographer Oded Balilty, whose photo essay “Along the Lines” explores how Israel’s construction of its protective fence contributes to the further separation and removal of the Israeli and Palestinian people; Nigerian photographer Akitunde Akinleye, whose photo essay “The Troubles of a Blessed Country” documents the resulting chaos from a fire at a petroleum pipeline ruptured by local scavengers; and Chinese/Inner Mongolian photographer A Yin, whose photo essay “Highland Mongolian Life” beautifully captures the traditional way of life of the people of the Mongolian highlands. Adobe is a sponsor of this year’s photography program. The awardees’ work will be exhibited in the courtyards of the Egyptian Theatre and National Geographic Society.
Balkan Beat Box will headline the Friday night music concert in both cities, marking its West Coast debut. The group will be performing songs from its just-released second album “Nu Med.” Made up of Israeli, Palestinian, Bulgarian, Moroccan and Spanish musicians now based in New York, Balkan Beat Box melds rhythms from all over the Mediterranean, giving its music an eclectic sound that combines dancehall grooves with hip hop beats, infused with Jewish, Balkan, Arabic, Syrian, European, Moroccan and American influences. TimeOut New York has compared Balkan Beat Box’s live show to an “electronic gypsy circus,” and Entertainment Weekly has described the music as “grooves… fueled by Manischewitz wine and a big dose of punk ‘tude.”
For ticket information in Los Angeles, please call 323.466.3456 (FILM) or order online through www.fandango.com. In Washington, DC tickets can be ordered online at www.tickets.com or by calling 202-857-7700.
The All Roads Film Festival is part of the All Roads Film Project, a National Geographic initiative to provide a global platform for indigenous and under-represented minority-culture storytellers around the world to showcase their talents and teach a broader audience about their cultures. In addition to providing a venue for their films, All Roads offers its filmmakers and photographers a series of networking opportunities with leaders of the film and photographic community. The All Roads Film Project awards a minimum of 10 seed grants a year to support the development and production of film and video projects by or about the indigenous and under-represented minority-culture film community. Seed grant recipients are considered for inclusion in the All Roads Film Festival and other National Geographic-affiliated broadcast outlets. The All Roads Photography Program provides photographers with seed money, cameras and photography equipment to assist with their fieldwork.
For more information on All Roads, visit www.nationalgeographic.com/allroads.
Established in 1981, the American Cinematheque is a nonprofit viewer-supported film exhibition and cultural organization dedicated to the celebration of the Moving Picture in all of its forms. The Cinematheque presents daily film and video programming, which ranges from the classics of American and international cinema to new independent films and digital work. Exhibitions of rare works, special and rare prints, etc., combined with fascinating post-screening discussions with the filmmakers who created the work, are Cinematheque traditions that keep audiences coming back for once-in-a-lifetime cinema experiences. The American Cinematheque renovated and reopened (on Dec. 4, 1998) the historic 1922 Hollywood Egyptian Theatre. This includes a state-of-the-art 616-seat theatre and a smaller 78-seat screening room housed within Sid Grauman’s first grand movie palace on Hollywood Boulevard. The exotic courtyard is fully restored to its 1922 grandeur. The Egyptian was the home of the very first Hollywood movie premiere in 1922. In January 2005 the American Cinematheque expanded its programming to the 1940 Aero Theatre on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica. www.americancinematheque.com.
###

For images, please visit: http://ftp.nationalgeographic.com/pressroom/all_roads_2007/
username: press; password: press; or email Adrian Coakley at acoakley@ngs.org.

WASHINGTON (Aug. 15, 2007)–A quiet, unassuming, young Native American woman competes to represent her nation in the most traditional of all beauty pageants. A gang of Mexican wrestlers dons colorful costumes and formulates colorful rhetoric to take on the slumlords and bureaucrats that threaten their communities. A humble Aymara farmer makes an unlikely bid to become the first indigenous Bolivian president on a pro-coca platform. These stories and more converge to bring audiences the contemporary tales of indigenous and under-represented minority cultures in the fourth annual National Geographic All Roads Film Festival, to be held Sept. 27-30 at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles and Oct. 4-7 at the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C. The four-day event will also feature a walk-through photography exhibit and music concert in both cities. In Washington, the event will include an art market.
Some of this year’s stand-out films include “Super Amigos,” a feature documentary by Arturo Pérez Torres that combines live-action with comic-book-style animation to depict a group of Lucha Libre wrestlers who have taken their fight to the streets of Mexico City, and “Miss Navajo,” a feature documentary by All Roads seed grantee Billy Luther (Navajo/Hopi/Laguna Pueblo), that follows the contestants of the Miss Navajo Nation competition.
Exclusive to Washington, D.C., the heralded films “Enemies of Happiness,” by filmmakers Eva Mulvad and Anja Al-Erhayem, and “Cocalero,” by director Alejandro Landes, will show the political process from two separate perspectives, as an Iraqi woman and an indigenous Aymara coca farmer endure racist and sexist insults, and sometimes death threats, in a quest to attain public office.
“The theme for this year’s festival, ‘New Voices, First Stories,’ exemplifies our mission to identify and promote the work of up-and-coming filmmakers, photographers and musicians who have fascinating stories to tell about their cultures and communities,” said Francene Blythe, director of the All Roads Film Project. “To overlook these stories is to ignore a vital part of our history as a global community, and thus All Roads will always seek out these films and make them accessible to a broader audience.”
This year’s festival will present four programming strands: “Women Hold Up Half the Sky,” a spotlight on women filmmakers; “Ancestors, Elders and Land,” highlighting the connection between native people and their land; “Under the Same Sun,” a look at the struggle that people endure as they confront dual cultural identities; and “Shorts from Around the World,” a showcase of short-subject films depicting a wide array of global cultures. Films represent a diverse range of countries and cultures, including Afghanistan, Australia, Bolivia, Canada, Finland, India, Iran, Iraq, Kurdistan, Mexico, New Zealand, Tonga (South Pacific Islands), Turkey and the United States.
All Roads will feature the world premiere of “A Shout Into the Wind,” by seed grantee Katja Gauriloff (Skolt Sámi). U.S. debuts include “Waban-Aki,” by First Nation filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin; “Crocodile Dreaming,” by Aboriginal director Darlene Johnson (seed grantee); “Daf,” by Kurdish filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi; “Hush,” by Aboriginal director Dena Curtis; “Land & Airwaves,” by First Nations filmmakers Patrick Boivin and Alland Flamand; “My Brother Vinnie,” by Aboriginal director Steven McGregor; “Nana,” by Aboriginal filmmaker Warwick Thornton; “Taua,” by Maori director Tearepa Kahi (seed grantee); and “Tavake,” by South Pacific Islander Paul Stoll.
Premiering in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., are features “Dol,” by Kurdish director Hiner Saleem, and “Four Sheets to the Wind,” by Native American director and seed grantee Sterlin Harjo (Seminole/Creek). Shorts “Menged,” by Ethiopian director Daniel Taye Workou, and “133 Skyway,” by Native American filmmaker Randy Redroad, will also make their local debuts.
This year’s photography program highlights the works of Kashmiri photographer Altaf Qadri, whose photo essay “Kashmir: Paradise in Pain” depicts the toll the Indian occupation of Kashmir has taken upon its people; Israeli photographer Oded Balilty, whose photo essay “Along the Lines” explores how Israel’s construction of its protective fence contributes to the further separation and removal of the Israeli and Palestinian people; Nigerian photographer Akitunde Akinleye, whose photo essay “The Troubles of a Blessed Country” documents the resulting chaos from a fire at a petroleum pipeline ruptured by local scavengers; and Chinese/Inner Mongolian photographer A Yin, whose photo essay “Highland Mongolian Life” beautifully captures the traditional way of life of the people of the Mongolian highlands. Adobe is a sponsor of this year’s photography program. The awardees’ work will be exhibited in the courtyards of the Egyptian Theatre and National Geographic Society.
Balkan Beat Box will headline the Friday night music concert in both cities, marking its West Coast debut. The group will be performing songs from its just-released second album “Nu Med.” Made up of Israeli, Palestinian, Bulgarian, Moroccan and Spanish musicians now based in New York, Balkan Beat Box melds rhythms from all over the Mediterranean, giving its music an eclectic sound that combines dancehall grooves with hip hop beats, infused with Jewish, Balkan, Arabic, Syrian, European, Moroccan and American influences. TimeOut New York has compared Balkan Beat Box’s live show to an “electronic gypsy circus,” and Entertainment Weekly has described the music as “grooves… fueled by Manischewitz wine and a big dose of punk ‘tude.”
For ticket information in Los Angeles, please call 323.466.3456 (FILM) or order online through www.fandango.com. In Washington, DC tickets can be ordered online at www.tickets.com or by calling 202-857-7700.
The All Roads Film Festival is part of the All Roads Film Project, a National Geographic initiative to provide a global platform for indigenous and under-represented minority-culture storytellers around the world to showcase their talents and teach a broader audience about their cultures. In addition to providing a venue for their films, All Roads offers its filmmakers and photographers a series of networking opportunities with leaders of the film and photographic community. The All Roads Film Project awards a minimum of 10 seed grants a year to support the development and production of film and video projects by or about the indigenous and under-represented minority-culture film community. Seed grant recipients are considered for inclusion in the All Roads Film Festival and other National Geographic-affiliated broadcast outlets. The All Roads Photography Program provides photographers with seed money, cameras and photography equipment to assist with their fieldwork.
For more information on All Roads, visit www.nationalgeographic.com/allroads.
Established in 1981, the American Cinematheque is a nonprofit viewer-supported film exhibition and cultural organization dedicated to the celebration of the Moving Picture in all of its forms. The Cinematheque presents daily film and video programming, which ranges from the classics of American and international cinema to new independent films and digital work. Exhibitions of rare works, special and rare prints, etc., combined with fascinating post-screening discussions with the filmmakers who created the work, are Cinematheque traditions that keep audiences coming back for once-in-a-lifetime cinema experiences. The American Cinematheque renovated and reopened (on Dec. 4, 1998) the historic 1922 Hollywood Egyptian Theatre. This includes a state-of-the-art 616-seat theatre and a smaller 78-seat screening room housed within Sid Grauman’s first grand movie palace on Hollywood Boulevard. The exotic courtyard is fully restored to its 1922 grandeur. The Egyptian was the home of the very first Hollywood movie premiere in 1922. In January 2005 the American Cinematheque expanded its programming to the 1940 Aero Theatre on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica. www.americancinematheque.com.
###

For images, please visit: http://ftp.nationalgeographic.com/pressroom/all_roads_2007/
username: press; password: press; or email Adrian Coakley at acoakley@ngs.org.

By James Howard Kunstler The New Urbanists held their big annual meet-up for four days last week and I stomped a big carbon footprint flying down to West Palm Beach for the doings. I don’t know who exactly picked West Palm, but it was at once peculiar, disheartening, instructive, and exhausting. The Congress for the [...]

WASHINGTON (Aug. 13, 2008)—Two women of the Rwanda genocide come face-to-face with the men who slaughtered their families. A mother and her taxi driver bond as they roam their war-torn Lebanon in search of her missing son. A couple of intrepid scientists race against time to find the last remaining speakers of endangered languages. These contemporary stories of indigenous and under-represented minority cultures are joined by 26 additional films that collectively represent 20 cultures from 15 countries, for the fifth anniversary of the All Roads Film Festival, to be held Sept. 25-28 at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles. This year’s theme is “Images and Story: A New Generation.” The All Roads Film Festival is sponsored by InterContinental Hotels & Resorts, and KCRW is an official media sponsor.

Kicking off with a live concert by celebrated Somali hip-hop MC, griot and singer/songwriter K’NAAN in his only Los Angeles-area performance with songs from his new CD “Troubadour,” the four-day event will also feature an outdoor photography exhibit with works from four provocative new voices in the photography medium. Sicilian songstress Carmen Consoli will perform in an All Roads event Friday, Sept. 26, at Hotel Café in Hollywood.

“In a world where indigenous languages are in jeopardy of imminent loss at the rate of one every two weeks, it is crucial that we recognize the value of our indigenous and under-represented minority-culture communities and the cultural knowledge they provide us,” said Francene Blythe, director of the All Roads Film Project. “With that in mind, it has become the mission of All Roads over the past five years to seek out the stories of these communities and make them accessible to a broader audience. Since our inception, All Roads has reached thousands of people throughout the world through our festival and traveling photography exhibits. In the coming years we hope to create an even greater impact as we continue to search out these unique stories, for they help us gain not only a greater understanding of ourselves but also of our place in the world.”

Among this year’s stand-out films are “Under the Bombs,” a narrative film by Franco-Lebanese director Philippe Aractingi, shot in the midst of real-time mortar bomb blasts and machine gun fire in war-torn Lebanon; “The Linguists,” a documentary by filmmakers Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger, who travel off the map to remote villages in Siberia, India and Bolivia to follow two tenacious college professors on a quest to record languages on the brink of disappearing; and “As We Forgive,” an emotional tale of loss and reconciliation by Laura Waters Hinson, winner of the Student Academy Award.

Other films of note are “What Was Promised,” by National Geographic Emerging Explorer and All Roads seed grantee Roshini Thinakaran, depicting the challenges faced by the female recruits of Iraq’s new security forces; “Sikumi (On the Ice)” a short by up-and-coming filmmaker Andrew Okpeaha Maclean (Iñupiaq); and Sundance audience favorite “Nikamowin (Song),” by director Kevin Lee Burton (Swampy Cree).

This year All Roads will include a program of “Persian Portraits,” featuring a collection of shorts and a long-form documentary curated by the Documentary Experimental Film Center in Tehran. The festival also will screen a number of animated shorts in addition to its roster of narrative and documentary shorts and features.

All Roads will present the Los Angeles premieres of “Under the Bombs,” “The Linguists,” and “As We Forgive.” Australian feature “When Colin Met Joyce” will be making its North American debut. Other films debuting include the world premieres of “What Was Promised,” Burmese short “A Sketch of Wathone” and All Roads seed grant short “Keao”; the North American premiere of Russian feature “Welcome to Enurmino!”; and the Los Angeles premieres of Kurdish short “White Mountains,” Maori feature documentary “Guarding the Family Silver,” Dene short “Aydaygooay,” Bolivian short “Weaving Life,” Mexican short “Under the Open Sky,” Miq’maq animated short “Maq and the Spirit of the Woods” and Hawaiian short “Na ‘Ono o ka ‘Aina – Delicacies of the Land.”

This year’s photography program features the work of 2008 All Roads Photography Program awardees Khaled Hasan (Bangladesh), Farzana Wahidy (Afghanistan), Alejandro Chaskielberg (Argentina) and Rena Effendi (Azerbaijan).

Hasan will present his photo essay “Living Stone: A Community Losing Its Life,” which focuses on the India-Bangladesh border community of Jaflong, whose inhabitants are struggling with the environmental, political and physical effects of the region’s stone-crushing industry. Wahidy’s exhibit, “Afghan Women,” explores the enormous pressures and perils faced by the women of her native land, who enjoy far fewer rights today than they did 30 years ago. Chaskielberg’s photo essay, “The High Tide: Native Islanders and the Community of the Paraná River Delta,” beautifully depicts a new culture — with its own laws and codes, a byproduct of unemployment and immigration — that has formed in this unique estuary, with a dense forest full of water and silence. Effendi’s essay, “Khinaliq Village — A Staircase to the Sky 2003-2006,” explores the effects of urbanization on the ancient village of Khinaliq in Azerbaijan, a village whose unique ancient culture is being threatened by the development of a luxury ski resort.

For ticket information call (323) 466.3456 (FILM) or order online through www.fandango.com. A full festival schedule is available at www.nationalgeographic.com/allroads.

The All Roads Film Festival is part of the All Roads Film Project, a National Geographic program created to provide an international platform for indigenous and under-represented minority-culture artists to share cultures, stories, and perspectives through the power of film and photography. In addition to providing a venue for their films, All Roads offers its filmmakers and photographers a series of networking opportunities and awards a minimum of 10 seed grants a year to support the development and production of film and video projects by or about indigenous and under-represented minority-culture communities. Seed grant recipients are considered for inclusion in the All Roads Film Festival and other National Geographic-affiliated broadcast outlets. The All Roads Photography Program provides photographers with seed money, cameras and photography equipment to assist with their fieldwork.

Established in 1981, the American Cinematheque is a nonprofit viewer-supported film exhibition and cultural organization dedicated to the celebration of the Moving Picture in all of its forms. The Cinematheque presents daily film and video programming, which ranges from the classics of American and international cinema to new independent films and digital work. Exhibitions of rare works, special and rare prints, etc., combined with fascinating post-screening discussions with the filmmakers who created the work, are Cinematheque traditions that keep audiences coming back for once-in-a-lifetime cinema experiences. The American Cinematheque renovated and reopened (on Dec. 4, 1998) the historic 1922 Hollywood Egyptian Theatre. This includes a state-of-the-art 616-seat theatre and a smaller 78-seat screening room housed within Sid Grauman’s first grand movie palace on Hollywood Boulevard. The exotic courtyard is fully restored to its 1922 grandeur. The Egyptian was the home of the very first Hollywood movie premiere in 1922. In January 2005 the American Cinematheque expanded its programming to the 1940 Aero Theatre on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica. www.americancinematheque.com.

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