
We would like to invite you to the last Asian American FilmLab meeting for
2006. It's been a great year, thank you all. This last meeting will be
all about *Feature Film Production*, featuring James Bai, Eric Byler, Karin
Chien, Stann Nakazono, and Greg Pak. See program information below. Don't
miss this!
AAFILMLAB FEATURE FILM PRODUCTION PANEL
Tuesday, December 5th @ 7:00 p.m.
19 West 26th Street, 5th Floor
Since this will be a very popular program, please follow the RSVP
guidelines.
RSVP to (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).
In *Subject* Heading include: AAFilmLab Feature Film Panel RSVP
In *Body* of your email: Your First and Last Name (No other text is
necessary)
Only ONE RSVP per email, no "guests" or +1's allowed. If you would like a
friend or colleague to attend, they must RSVP for themselves. Attendence is
on a first come, first served basis. Only fifty (50) slots are available.
We will be accepting a suggested donation of $5 per person to help pay for
food and drinks.
6:30 - 7:00 - Attendees arrive
7:00 - 7:05 - Introduce Panel members
7:05 - 7:45 - Feature Film Production Discussion
1) Provide practical advice for filmmakers interested in their first feature
2) Share any lessons learned from their own feature projects
3) Advice on scriptwriting/fundraising/preproduction/production/post - (in
brief)
4) Thoughts on the future of Asian American films including the Asian
American Market
7:45 - 8:30 - Question and Answer
8:30 - 9:30 - Networking Mixer with Food and Wine
About our Panel:
JAMES BAI
Born in Columbia, Missouri and raised in Southern California, James Bai studied business management as an undergraduate while playing lead guitar in various rock bands dating back to jr. high. It was as an accountant that he made his first film, a short animation on 10 stacks of Post-Its(c) called *Bonin': A Dog's Life*. After confirmation from his younger brother, who at that
time was attending NYU's undergraduate film program, that the short was indeed as funny as he thought, James applied to graduate film schools and was accepted by Columbia University. It was there that he spent 4 years developing his quirky and and intense visual story-telling style. His student short films went on to garner numerous awards while screening internationally and broadcasting domestically. After graduating, a calling to go "into the shed" caught hold of James and he spent the next 6 months in Alaska, where he taught himself to play the piano by ear at a nearby church, as research for his new film. James returned to New York City, and settled in the borough of Brooklyn where he embarked on the production of the mesmerizing tale of *Puzzlehead*. *Puzzlehead* made its world premiere at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival and was the grand prize winner at the Scienceplusfiction Film Festival.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1842522/
ERIC BYLER
Bi-racial writer-director was nominated for an Independant Spirit Award in
2003 for his first feature CHARLOTTE SOMETIMES, which also earned
nominations for producer Marc Ambrose and actress Jacqueline Kim. Eric's
second feature AMERICANese was purchased for theatrical distribution by IFC
Films, after premiering at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March of
2006 where it won the Audience Award, and Special Jury Award for Outstanding
Ensemble Cast. Eric directed the Asian American TV Pilot MY LIFE
DISORIENTED which
premieres on PBS on Dec. 26th, and has a CHARLOTTE SOMETIMES sequel called
TRE in post production. In 1995, Eric's student film KENJI'S FAITH premiered
at the Sundance Film Festival, won six other festival awards, and was
nominated for a
Student Academy Award. Eric's father is of European descent and his mother
is Chinese American.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0818611/
KARIN CHIEN
Karin Chien is an independent film producer based in New York City and Los
Angeles. Ms. Chien recently wrapped post-production on UNDOING, which
premiered at the 2006 Los Angeles Film Festival, and is currently in
post-production on FOLLOWING ROSA, which filmed in the Philippines in Fall
2005. Ms. Chien also produced THE MOTEL (winner of the Sundance/NHK
Filmmakers Award, the Humanitas Prize, and 3 Best Narrative Feature Film
Festival Awards), currently in theatrical release by Palm Pictures. Ms.
Chien has produced the feature-length films MVP, which premiered at the 2004
Sundance Film Festival, and ROBOT STORIES, winner of 35 film festival awards
and self-distributed theatrically to over 50 cities nationwide.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0157313/
STANN NAKAZONO
Stann Nakazono is a sansei (third-generation Japanese-American) filmmaker
who has been making films since high school (his Super-8 short, Life of a
Samurai, got an A+ in an Asian American Studies class). He shot, produced,
directed and edited the 1984 documentary short, E-Z Rock: Asian American
Breakdancer, the story of a breakdancing 14-year-old who is at odds with his
traditional Asian father. It won critical acclaim at Asian American film
festivals in New York and in Los Angeles. In 1997, he produced his first
feature film, Hang Your Dog in the Wind, which had its world premiere at the
'97 Slumdance Experience (which he
co-founded) at Park City, Utah, the alternative to the alternative of the
Sundance Film Festival. Hang Your Dog in the Wind was featured in other
film festivals in New York, Chicago, Orlando and Europe. It won the Special
Jury Prize at the 1997 Florida Film Festival. After co-directing his
independently-funded feature film, Much Adobo About Nothing , he produced
the acclaimed live action/animated short An I
Within,
which won the Best Cinematography Award at the 1999 Florida Film Festival,
Special Achievement Award at the USA Film Festival and Best American Short
at the L.A. Short Film Festival.
http://www.traaxproduction.com/index.html
GREG PAK
Greg Pak is an award-winning writer and director whose feature film, "Robot Stories,"starring Tamlyn Tomita and Sab Shimono, played in 75 festivals, won 35 awards, screened theatrically across the country, and is now available on DVD from Kino International. Pak's feature screenplay "Rio Chino" won the Pipedream Screenwriting Award at the IFP Market and a Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship. Pak wrote the
screenplay for the feature film "MVP," which premiered at the 2004 Sundance
Film Festival. Pak is now writing comic books. Projects include "Incredible Hulk" and "X-Men: Phoenix - Endsong" for Marvel and "Battlestar Galactica" for Dynamite.
http://www.pakbuzz.com
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0657062/
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