Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Broad Street Film Festival in Photos

by Allison McLean
Editor-in-chief

In its second official year, the Broad Street Film Festival held a three-evening event last weekend, April 22-24. Unlike last year, however, the festival was not run by Bryan College.

The Broad Street Film Festival is a nonprofit organization under the umbrella of The Community Foundation of Greater Chattanooga. According to a Broad Street Festival news release, the organization’s goal is to “enhance the film culture of Chattanooga by hosting a film festival that provides community exposure for collegiate filmmaking talent as well as educational and networking opportunities for the next generation of filmmakers in the Chattanooga region.”

The events included a screenings of festival films at the Carmike Majestic  12 last Thursday night, which was attended by over 400 people, an informal evening with Director Scott Teems on Friday for the filmmakers and the formal awards ceremony on Saturday evening at the Tivoli Theatre, which was attended by 600 people. Read full story »

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Big changes coming to Film Festival

by Billy Findley
Sports Editor

The hour is waning. All those months of writing, planning, filming, editing and sweating will hopefully pay off for Bryan film majors anxious to see the results of their latest films at the Broad Street Film Festival in Chattanooga, April 22-24. According to the film makers and those planning the event, the festival should be a dandy.

“I think there are a lot of reasons to be excited about this because there are such a great variety of films coming from Bryan this year,” senior Phillip Johnston said.

Last year, Bryan broke with tradition and featured films not only produced by the Bryan College film department but also by students of Covenant College (Lookout Mt., Ga.). This year, the festival alterations are even more significant.

First and foremost of these alterations is that the festival is no longer going to be a Bryan College event. Rather it is hosted by a separate non-profit organization funded by the Community Foundation of Greater Chattanooga and will be featuring films not just from two schools this year but three (possibly four counting UTC): Bryan College, Covenant College and Southern Adventist University (Collegedale, Tenn.). Southern Adventist has had an established film program for the last 10 years, according to Bryan Assistant Professor of Communication Studies Chris Clark.

Another noteworthy change is that the films will literally be showing on the big screens at the Carmike Majestic 12 movie theater in Chattanooga. This is a tremendous change from last year’s venue at the Bijou.

“This is the biggest step the film culture has taken in presenting its work to the Chattanooga community at large,” Johnston said. “It’s great for the filmmakers and the students.”

The film festival is a three-day event which begins with the showing of the films in the Majestic theater on Thursday, April 22. All the viewings are open to the public. The second day, film students will get the privilege of meeting and listening to independent film director Scott Teems, director and writer of the film “That Evening Sun.” And of course, the awards ceremony will take place the final day of the festival at the grand Tivoli Theater in Chattanooga.

“We stepped it up last year, and I think it’s going to be even better this year,” Clark said.

The awards ceremony will include many of the same elements included in last year’s awards night, according to Clark, with multiple school bands performing, clips shown of the films and obviously the awards and the speeches and lots of tuxedos and fancy gowns. There will also be three new awards offered for this ceremony including awards for Best Documentary, Best Original Screenplay and Best Music Video.

One major alteration to the award’s night as opposed to last year’s will be the length of the actual ceremony, according to Clark. What was three hours long last year will hopefully be trimmed to about one hour and 45 minutes this year. There will also be a professional master of ceremony’s hired for the event as well.

“We’re trying to pull in the city,” Clark said. “We’ll be hitting the media outlets in print, on the Internet, television… many people have given money for this event from corporations and organizations.”

Clark said he highly recommends students become fans of the Broad Street Film Festival on Facebook. Student tickets for the festival will go on sale April 14-16. The ticket will cover the cost of both the film viewings at The Carmike Majestic 12 as well as the awards ceremony at the Tivoli.

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

‘A Serious Man’

by Phillip Johnston

a-serious-man-posterI’ll admit from the start that I don’t quite know how to write about Joel and Ethan Coen’s new film “A Serious Man” (newly released on DVD), but I’ll begin with a few things I know for sure. I know that this is a hysterically funny movie and that it made me laugh so hard that my stomach started to ache. I know that it is very personal on the part of the filmmakers and that it is perfectly executed for just that reason. I’m confident that it achieves a polished completeness and finality that many directors only dream of.

But do I understand it?

I wish.

Here’s the rundown: Life is unraveling for physics professor and generally good man Larry Gopnik. His wife, Judith, is having an affair with an aloof family friend and wants a divorce. His brother Arthur (Richard Kind) is emotionally and physically incapable of living alone and spends his nights in Larry’s living room.

The Gopnik children, Danny and Sarah, are pilfering cash from their father’s wallet to buy pot and save up for a nose job. There’s an anonymous person writing nasty letters to the university to tarnish Larry’s good reputation and destroy his chances at tenure. An unhappy graduate student is attempting to bribe him for a better math grade with an envelope of large bills.

Distraught and terribly confused, Larry sets out on a quest to find some balance to the chaos. A devout Jew, he’s advised by his friends to talk to the rabbi. He consults three and they all have different non-answers. Temptations arise, questions go unanswered, doors get slammed in his face, and Larry is confronted with many a harrowing choice, each one compounding the mystery of the Coen brothers’ latest existential riddle. Read full story »

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Chapel films impress students

Students vote on the two films shown in Chapel for the creative film series

Students vote on the two films shown in Chapel for the creative film series

by Krissy Proctor
Staff Writer

From a philosophical fish store and the portrayal of fantastical, psychedelic highs to the story of a man awaiting the return of his single, picture-framed heart, students last week laughed, cried and left impressed with the films shown in the Monday and Wednesday chapels.

“I thought it was great, I would like to see more,” junior Glenna Gibbs said Wednesday. Read full story »

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Student films will debut in chapel

by Jordan Pilgrim
Multimedia Editor

Bryan College’s film majors have been working with the Spiritual Formations staff to prepare two films to be shown as part of a chapel series about Christianity in the arts, exploring the idea of living out the Christian faith incarnationally.

The first film, to be shown on Monday, Nov. 30, is titled “Animals.” This film consists of three short films that present different ways in which an animal helps someone to learn about the nature of love, faith and God. These shorts are directed by junior Bryce McGuire, senior Phillip Johnston and senior Colton Davie.

On Wednesday, Dec. 2, a second film directed by juniors Bryan Saylor and Jordan Pilgrim and titled “Maxwell Beasley’s Heart” will be shown. This film also follows the theme of incarnational living as it considers the ways in which people give and receive love by following its title character, Maxwell Beasley, as he loses his heart.

Below is the teaser for “Animals.”

Animals – Teaser from Colton Davie on Vimeo.