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All Roads is collaborating with the Lensic Performing Arts Center for the presentation of the All Roads/Lensic Film & Photography Project. This pilot project was launched in 2007 with Santa-Fe area high schools to encourage students to document their communities through film and photography. Today's event will showcase one film and 5 images from each participating school. Resources and materials were distributed to the schools in the Fall of 2007 to help students create and produce their projects. During December's Santa Fe Film Festival, students were invited to attend a workshop and screening with All Roads Filmmakers. The images will remain on display through May 2.

GlobalgreenThe Inaugural Global Green Indigenous Film Festival is set to kick off this week on April 18, in Santa Fe, NM. The festival will showcase over 40 films from across the globe, each addressing the relationship between indigenous communities and the environmental/social challenges facing our planet. All Roads will open and close the festival with screenings of Arctic Sun (Andrew Walton) and Kekexili: Mountain Patrol (Lu Chuan), respectively. Both films will be screened at the Santa Fe Film Center at Cinema Cafe. In addition to the films, the festival will also host a youth film workshop as well as panels addressing such topics as "Green Filmmaking", "Exploring Indigenous Languages in Film", and "Going Green with Wind and Sun."

For more information visit: http://www.ggiff.com/ or call: 505-242-2175
April 18-20, 2008

All Roads Santa Fe Perspective

Posted on January 25, 2008 in Film | 0 Comments

Duc1Check out All Roads seed grantee and filmmaker Duc Nguyen's perspective on his All Roads Film Festival experience in Santa Fe. Duc's film Bolinao 52 was funded with a seed grant in 2006 and featured in the 2007 All Roads Film Festival in Santa Fe.

It's a Wrap!!

Posted on December 6, 2007 in Film | 0 Comments

Miss Navajo
National Geographic All Roads filmmakers collected three awards in international competition this weekend at the Santa Fe Film Festival.

Director Darlene Johnson's "Crocodile Dreaming" won for Best Short Film, Director Billy Luther's "Miss Navajo" won Best Indigenous Film, and Alanis Obomsawin, Canada's most prominent indigenous filmmaker, was one of three recipients of the Luminaria Award for lifetime achievement.

More than 20,000 attendees descended upon the Land of Enchantment for the festival, which offers a wide selection of independent films, documentaries, narratives, international films, gala presentations of films from major distributors, retrospective screenings and educational workshops as well as opportunities for working filmmakers to network and reach out to the public.
Alanisgroup
All Roads has had an increasing presence in Santa Fe since debuting at the festival in 2005. According to Deputy Director Stephen Rubin, “All Roads brings a cache of international flavor to the Santa Fe Film Festival.”

In addition to the dynamic filmmakers, films, photographers and photography presented on behalf of All Roads in Santa Fe, NG World Music, which is a major component of the festivals in Hollywood and Washington D.C., made its debut this year with a memorable showcase.

In a scene punctuated by hypnotic desert grooves, chaos in the aisles, restrained delirium, and the occasional intervention of management, the African desert rock group "Tinawaren" shook the Lensic Performing Arts Center to the brink of bedlam during its Friday night performance.

The 800-plus attendees were taken for an emotional ride, driven by the music into the aisles. Then they were forced back to their seats, as management stopped the concert on two occasions, threatening to shut the place down.

In addition to the screenings and showcases offered, All Roads presented two special screenings to more than 700 local students, followed by a question and answer session with the filmmakers.

Romonaemerson
All Roads also worked with the New Mexico State Film Office to select three Governor's Cup Film winners in a partnership to honor and support new independent filmmakers.

Darlene Johnson and BrutusAll Roads Filmmakers made a significant impact at the 2007 Santa Fe Film Festival awards ceremony collecting 3 awards. The night kicked off to a rousing start as host Ali McGraw called announced All Roads seed granteeDarlene Johnson's (pictured w/Brutus) "Crocodile Dreaming"as the festival's "Best Short Format Film" as selected by the Jury. Darlene was shocked and humbled that her mystical film, that delves into ancient aboriginal traditions, was recognized among the many competing films covering more mainstream subject.

More to come...

About the All Roads Film Project

About the All Roads Film Project Blog

The All Roads Film Project is a National Geographic program dedicated to providing a platform for indigenous and underrepresented minority-culture storytellers around the world to showcase their works to promote knowledge, dialogue, and understanding with a broader, global audience.

 

About the All Roads Film Project Blog

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