In the News - Santa Cruz Film Festival
May 6, 2004
Fest of the West
Rock-star filmmakers bookend a provocative program at the Santa Cruz Film
Festival
By WALLACE BAINE
SENTINEL STAFF WRITER
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Bernard Shakey isnt the kind of name thats going to drag you away
from the NBA Playoffs and down to the local theater. But theres something
you should know about the enigmatic Mr. Shakey before
you write off the Santa Cruz Film Festival as only something film geeks do:
Hes had quite a career in another field where he answered to the name
Neil Young.
Rocks most brilliant iconoclast is now a psuedonymed director and his
new film, "Greendale," opens the third annual Santa Cruz Film Festival
on May 13.
And like a good three-minute rock song, the opening riff returns at the end
when another famous rock n roll hall-of-famer, Doors keyboard
master Ray Manzarek, comes to town with his most recent film, the thriller
"Love Her Madly," based on a short story by another former film
student who did OK in the music industry, Jim Morrison.
In between the two marquee-name films will be more than 70 others, shorts
and feature-lengths, documentaries and dramas, familiar stories and experimental
studies, social indictments and spiritual explorations.
"This one is all about art and how it makes us feel," said the festivals
director Jane Sullivan, introducing the festivals theme as "Moving
Pictures."
The creation of art and the boundaries that art both draws and erases are
themes that run throughout the 25 programs that make up the festival. Many
of the films are the kind of creative explorations that mainstream Hollywood
and even the independent film industry often ignore. "Proteus,"
for example, seeks to retrace the artistic imagination of the 19th century
by exploring the deep seas, the kind of boundless realm of wonder that space
is today.
Yet the festival is not all exercises in intellectual exploration. "Never
Been Done," part of the festivals "Surf Night" on May
16 documents a professional skateboarder who skates on a prosthetic leg. The
pioneering all-female punk band the Runaways is the subject of the documentary
"Edgeplay."
Christopher Coppolas "The Creature from the Sunny Side Up Trailer
Park" pits two separated-at-birth twin brothers one black, one
white in a tragicomic take on racism.
The tone is set immediately by "Greendale," Neil Youngs film
version of the theme album he released last year. Shot in and around Half
Moon Bay Young makes his home in the hills near La Honda "Greendale,"
through songs performed by Young and his band Crazy Horse, tells the story
of the Green family and their spirited eco-warrior daughter Sun Green.
"I suggest everybody get the CD first," said Sullivan. " Its
really a rock opera, and if you dont know the material, you might be
a little lost. Its an organic, rough-hewn thing, not at all your typical
Hollywood fare."
An opening-night party at the Museum of Art and History in Santa Cruz will
feature the art of Jim Mazzeo, a Santa Cruz artist and co-star of "Greendale."
Mazzeo, who has created album covers for Young in the past, will display his
art work. Also at the opening-night bash will be a screening of "Light
My Fire A Return to the Whisky A Go Go," produced by Manzarek.
Sullivan is also working to secure a special guest at the party, fella by
the name of Bernard Shakey.
Sullivan has made changes from last years festival, most notably cutting
back on the sheer number of films being screened (though the number of screenings
is roughly the same). From 154 titles last year, the festival is showing only
74 this year, but repeating many of them in an effort to give
audiences more flexibility in seeing what they want to see. "Were
getting to know our audience better," said Sullivan, still fine-tuning
the festival in its third season.
The SCFF is also spreading out to several movie theaters and venues across
Santa Cruz from the downtown Del Mar and Riverfront Twin to UC Santa Cruz
and Cabrillo College to the Rio Theatre and the first-ever visit of the festival
to the Skyview Drive-In.
The festivals commitment to local filmmakers continues with contributions
from 22 local filmmakers. UCSC professor Chip Lord presents "Ant Farm,"
the story of the radical art collective of which he was a part in the 1960s
and 70s. Santa Cruzans Cam Archer and Aaron Platt, both of whom had
shorts accepted at the Sundance Film Festival this year, are also part of
the festival.
Santa Cruz-based writer and provocateur Robert Anton Wilson is the subject
of local filmmaker Lance Bauschers "Maybe Logic."
As in past years, the SCFF is divided into programs, discrete groupings of
films centered on a theme or subject. The programs range from "God Is
in the Details," which centers on spiritual subjects, to "Rave On,"
films about party culture.
Other highlights include the penetrating documentary about women working in
independent film "In the Company of Women" that showed at Sundance,
and "Awful Normal," a documentary about a young woman confronting
the man who molested her as a child 25 years earlier, all as the camera rolls.
Another documentary, "Farmingville" brings dimension to the thorny
issue of undocumented workers and "At the First Breath of Wind,"
from Italian filmmaker Franco Pavoli, is a cinematic tone poem that witnesses
the wonder of a day in rural Italy.
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