“WHEN
I’M JUDGING a festival
and the lights go down, within 20 seconds I can spot
a Stanford film, because it is perfectly
styled, the focus is perfect, the lighting is perfect and
the storytelling is great,” says Gail Silva, who sits
on the advisory board of the Sundance Festival and directs
the
Film Arts Foundation, a San Francisco-based nonprofit that
supports independent filmmakers. “The program turns out
extremely high-caliber filmmakers who consistently go on
to illustrious careers.”
Here’s a sampling of their
works:
Brother
Outsider, co-directed and co-produced by Nancy
Kates, MA ’95, aired in January on PBS. Chronicling the
tumultuous life of Bayard Rustin, an early civil rights leader
who was ostracized for being gay, it was named best documentary
feature at the Cinequest Film Festival and at the Lesbian and
Gay Film Festival in Turin, Italy.
Daddy and Papa, about gay couples who decide to raise children
together, aired on PBS in June and has won more than a dozen
festival awards. Director-producer Johnny Symons, MA ’97,
who teaches in the Stanford program, also co-produced Long
Night’s Journey Into Day, on South Africa’s truth
and reconciliation efforts, which won the Sundance Film Festival’s
grand jury prize for best documentary in 2000.
Daughter
from Danang, edited by Kim Roberts, MA ’96,
follows a young Vietnamese-born woman who was raised in Tennessee
by an adoptive family, as she returns to Vietnam to meet her
birth family, with disturbing consequences. Shown in theaters
across the nation, it won last year’s Sundance grand
jury prize. While at Stanford, Roberts received a Student Academy
Award for Miriam
Is Not Amused, about the long and resilient
marriage of beat poet Kenneth Patchen and his wife, Miriam
Patchen.
Girls
Like Us, by Jane Wagner, MA ’88, and Tina DiFeliciantonio,
MA ’87, follows four South Philadelphia girls from ages
14 to 18 as they face their sexuality and other issues of adolescence.
Released in 1997, it won the Sundance grand jury prize and
a National Emmy Award for outstanding cultural program.
Occidental Encounters, the thesis film of Yuriko Gamo Romer,
MA ’97, won a Student Academy Award and a Heartland Film
Festival award. It examines Japanese-American intercultural
marriages, including the filmmaker ’s own.
Samsara, exploring Cambodian life in the aftermath of Pol
Pot’s killing fields, was the thesis film of Ellen Bruno,
MA ’90. It won a Sundance award and the Edward R. Murrow
Award. Another Bruno film, Sacrifice—about children taken
from Burma and used as prostitutes in neighboring Thailand—earned
honors in 1998 from Sundance, the San Francisco International
Film Festival and the National Educational Film Festival.
Shooting War: The Combat Cameramen of WWII, produced by
Steven Spielberg and assistant-edited by Laura Almo, MA ’98,
premiered on ABC on Pearl Harbor Day, 2000.
Slender
Existence, a memoir of life as an anorexic
by Laura Murray, MA ’99, garnered a Student Academy
Award as well as honors from the Ann Arbor and Marin
County film
festivals.
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