Happy 50th, Ann Arbor Film Festival!
On today's Artpod, we hear from the festival's director, Donald Harrison. We also catch up with two longtime fans of the festival - one: an audience member, the other: a filmmaker - to hear some of their favorite film fest memories.
http://traffic.libsyn.com/mrartpod/Artpod_032812.mp3
Festival-goer: "Every year I find at least two or three films that are just amazing."
John Johnson has been going to the Ann Arbor Film Festival since the late 1960s, and considers himself a big fan of the event.
He's such a big fan that when a film he likes doesn't win an award at the festival, he sends the filmmaker a "a few dollars myself and tell them what a great film it was." He says he's probably done that about four times, three of which have resulted in a letter back from the filmmaker and a DVD copy of the film.
One of his favorite memories was when he saw Claude LeLouch's "Rendezvous" at the 1976 film festival. He says the film "totally blew my mind," left him with goose bumps.
http://youtu.be/JeNc4AHEZso
Johnson says every year he finds "at least two or three films that are just amazing, from my point of view." He says it's worth sitting in the theatre for hours to get to the films "that are just amazing that you would have nowhere else to see."
Filmmaker: "It’s probably the festival’s fault that I became a filmmaker."
Leighton Pierce, a filmmaker and installation artist, calls the Ann Arbor Film Festival his favorite, in part because the films are screened in the Michigan Theater, a "gorgeous" space with nice seats and an organ player.
"Normally experimental film is shown in dark, basement-like places," explains Pierce.
He first entered the festival in 1981 with his 16mm film "He Likes to Chop Down Trees."
http://youtu.be/QHZdtcUApqk
The film won a $100 prize, which Pierce says "was a thrill! It's probably the festival’s fault that I became a filmmaker because that kind of encouragement early on can really like be a dangerous thing."
The organ music heard in the radio piece is from Steven Ball's "Havin' a Ball!," where he plays the 1927 Barton Theater Organ at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor.