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2007 SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INNOVATIVE, COMPELLING, AND PROGRESSIVE SHORT FILM PROGRAM

Free Online Streaming of a Program of Short Films Returns to Sundance Film Festival Website at www.sundance.org

Free Online Streaming of a Program of Short Films Returns to Sundance Film Festival Website at www.sundance.org

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Park City, UT – The Sundance Institute today announced the short films selected to screen at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. This year the Festival has selected 71 short films, representing 19 countries, from 4445 submissions from American and international filmmakers. Fueled by independent artistic expression, these dramatic, documentary, and animated short films include stories that range from fallen cartoon heroes to the tale of a rat in the Manhattan subway; from advice about the uses of Duct tape in biological warfare to a mother’s hunt for her son in hell to female Bolivian wrestlers. The 2007 Sundance Film Festival runs January 18-28 with screenings in Park City, Sundance Resort, Salt Lake City, and Ogden, Utah. The Short Film Program, both at the Festival and online, is presented by Festival sponsor, Adobe Systems.

From January 18 to April 18, a selection of short films will be available, free of charge, to film lovers around the world at the Sundance Film Festival website at www.sundance.org. These films will be posted after they have screened at the Festival. These diverse and stimulating short films screen either prior to complementary feature films or are presented as part of one of the six short film programs, which include programs dedicated to animated films, and documentary shorts. A Short Film Jury will award prizes based on outstanding achievement and merit in American and International Short Filmmaking to films under 30 minutes in length.

"There is artistry to making a short film, whether cutting-edge drama, animation or just shining examples of this often overlooked genre,” said John Cooper, Director of Programming, Sundance Film Festival. "At Sundance we work hard not only to find the best-made shorts possible, but we continue to explore ways to bring them well-deserved attention and higher profile. We facilitate this visibility through screenings during the 10 days of the Festival in Park City and more broadly through the Festival website, where we stream short films free of charge and are building a world-wide audience for this amazing work.”


As the premier showcase for the best new work of American independent and international filmmakers, the Sundance Film Festival screens films that embody creative risk–taking, diversity, and aesthetic innovation. Short films have always been a part of the Festival program and accessible to all festival–goers. Sundance Film Festival short film alums include such renowned filmmakers as Todd Haynes, Spike Jonze, Paul Thomas Anderson, Wes Anderson, David O. Russell, Todd Field, Gus Van Sant, Lisa Kruger, Peter Sollet, Patricia Cardoso, Alison Maclean, Tamara Jenkins, Trey Parker, and Matt Stone.

“Thanks to many factors, including online resources, more and more people are learning the power of the short film as both entertainment and art,” said Trevor Groth, Sundance Film Festival Senior Programmer. “This fact is proven by both the number of submissions and the high quality of films we received. Having expanded our programming team to four people this year we were able to select an incredibly diverse range of styles that represent the full spectrum of gifted filmmakers working in the short form.”

The short films selected for the 2007 Sundance Film Festival are:

U.S. SHORT FILMS
This year’s short films reinforce the genre as one which represents creativity and technological innovation. These films are diverse, eclectic and stray from the norms of creative film production. This year’s U.S. shorts include a collection of films that grapple with such issues as a seemingly perfect mother who is addicted to drugs, the dilemma of what to do with a store-bought box of happiness, and a portrait of a notoriously anti–gay singer from the 1970s.

Dramatic Shorts

A NICK IN TIME (Director: Be' Garrett)–An old school barber recounts a story from his past to teach a lesson to a troubled young man.

AFTERMATH ON MEADOWLARK LANE (Director: David Zellner)–While on their way to a mariachi recital, a devastating car crash forces a mother and her two sons to confront the truth about their past.

BITCH (Director: Lilah Vandenburgh)–A tough girl with a predilection for quality vinyl and a hard jab soon finds herself falling for a jerk with poor social skills and bad taste in music.

BLACK AND WHITE TRYPPS NUMBER THREE (Director: Ben Russell)–The transformation of a rock audience's collective freak–out into a trance ritual of the highest spiritual order.

BOBBY BIRD: THE DEVIL IN DENIM (Director: Carson D. Mell)–Aging rock musician Bobby Bird explains the origins of his many tattoos with the aid of flashbacks.

BOMB (Director: Ian Olds)–What starts as an innocent flirtation between teenagers on the edge of an old bombing range turns askew when a trip home reveals a chaotic adult world that seeks to subvert their friendship.

CONVERSION (Director: Nanobah Becker)–Christian missionaries make a catastrophic visit to a Navajo family.

THE DAWN CHORUS (Director: Hope Dickson Leach)–Seven years since their plane crashed, Bonnie and Lloyd are still searching the wreckage of the event that marked their parent's demise.

DEATH TO THE TINMAN (Director: Ray Tintori)–A dark story of how the OZ Tinwoodsman lost his limbs, his lover, and how he tried to get his life back.

DER OSTWIND (Director: Kohl Glass)–In search of a worthy opponent, a German WWI ace pursues a mysterious and invincible American pilot only to discover the true cost of honor.

DOORMAN (Director: Etienne Kallos)–A Latino doorman of a New York apartment building begins to unravel emotionally when he is seduced and then dumped by a privileged college kid who lives in the building.

FOR A SWIM WITH THE FISH (Director: Tara Autovino)–A child who believes that her mother has relocated (literally) to the Gulf of Mexico, skips school to pay her mother a birthday visit.

THE GRASS GROWS GREEN (Director: Jesus Beltran)–A Marine's complicated relationship with life and death, from behind the recruiting office desk.

HAPPINESS (Director: Sophie Barthes)–One evening after work, Iwona buys a box of happiness in a strange discount store and has to decide what to do with it.

HIGH FALLS (Director: Andrew Zuckerman)–Over a weekend at a country home, a man and his pregnant wife each tell their secrets to their best friend – placing both him in an awkward position and their own relationshiop in jeopardy.

INFINITE DELAY (Director: Kadet Kuhne)–A restrained subject surrenders herself to a sublime state of waiting in a mysterious underwater world.

INTERVIEW (Director: Charles Burmeister)–After a failed job interview, Mark must face his girlfriend and defend his decision to wear a wrinkled shirt.

KING (Director: Caran Hartsfield)–The older woman in apt.# 3B has unusual plans.

LIGHT WORK I (Director: Jennifer Reeves)–Found images from 20th century educational films are sewn together with melted down pharmaceuticals affixed directly to the film, forming a concentrated fusion with pulsating electronic sounds, bass clarinet and organ.

LITTLE FARM (Director: Calvin Reeder)–A family moves to a small farm for a fresh start, things change for them.

MAGNETIC POLES (Director: Maria Rosenblum)–Realizing her relationship is in trouble a waitress seeks to re–attract her boyfriend by shaking up their normal life with a bizarre trip to a magnetic hill.

MOVE ME (Director: Jonathan Pulley)–Over the course of his last evening with his dad, Graham must find a way to say goodbye before his relationship with his father slips away completely.

THE OATES' VALOR (Director: Timothy Cahill)–After several attempts to appease his father's militant demands, Boyson Oates finally runs away from home, only to be lured back in hopes of one last chance at reconciliation.

POP FOUL (Director: Moon Molson)–A boy sees his father attacked by a local thug on the way home from a Little League game and agrees to help his father hide the incident from his mother.

SONGBIRD (Director: John Thompson)–A delicious tale about marriage, revenge, household pets and unusual eating habits.

WINDOWBREAKER (Director: Tze Chun)–When a string of break-ins occurs in a mixed-race suburb, residents are abuzz as to who is responsible.

ZARIN (Director: Shirin Neshat)–Overcome by her feelings of guilt and shame, Zarin, a young prostitute in Iran, attempts to escape her life in a desperate search for salvation.

Documentary Shorts

FREEHELD (Director: Cynthia Wade)–In the last weeks of her life, Lieutenant Laurel Hester has one goal – to leave her hard–earned pension to her life partner Stacie.

GOD PROVIDES (Directors: Brian Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky)–A look at the varied and unexpected responses to natural disaster.

I JUST WANTED TO BE SOMEBODY (Director: Jay Rosenblatt)–Part document and part poem, this film brings us back to the late 1970s and reflects on Anita Bryant's life and the impact she had.

MOTHER SUPERIOR (Directors: Alex Mack & Diana Montero)–A mom is supposed to be perfect, but that is often far from the truth in this examination of mothers who are addicted to methamphetamines.

SCAREDYCAT (Director: Andy Blubaugh)–This film examines the inevitable and justifiable fear the filmmaker experiences following a physical assault at the hands of five young men.

SPITFIRE 944 (Director: William Lorton)–An 83-year-old World War II pilot views 16mm footage of his 1944 Spitfire crash for the first time.

THE FIGHTING CHOLITAS (Directors: Mariam Jobrani, Kenny Krauss, Teresa Deskins)–A group of bold, female, Bolivian wrestlers push the limits of their culture by performing the acrobatic maneuvers of Lucha Libre every Sunday.

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN (Director: Mitch McCabe)–A photographer chronicles her life over five years of political events, comically interweaving protest footage with her photographic diary of self-portraits to tell a modern tale about art, change, hope, and futility.

Animated Shorts

DESTINY MANIFESTO (Director: Martha Colburn)–An exploration between the visual and psychological parallels between the American western frontier and the conflict in the Middle East.

DUCT TAPE AND COVER (Director: Yong–Jin Park)–A satirical response to the Department of Homeland Security's recent advice for Americans to ready themselves for possible chemical and biological warfare.

EVERYTHING WILL BE OK (Director: Don Hertzfeldt)–A series of dark and troubling events force Bill to reckon with the meaning of his life – or lack thereof.

GOLDEN AGE (Director: Aaron Augenblick)–The shocking true stories of the world's strangest fallen cartoon heroes.

HOW SHE SLEPT AT NIGHT (Director: Lilli Carre)–A man tries to remember his wife, but only comes up with scant details as his memory starts to stray.

ONE RAT SHORT (Director: Alex Weil)–A tale of a subway rat who is led by the mesmerizing ballet of a discarded food wrapper into an adventure of love and loss on a dark Manhattan night.

PAULINA HOLLERS (Director: Brent Green)–A religious zealot mother commits suicide to try to find her dead son in hell and escape with him.

PHANTOM CANYON (Director: Stacey Steers)–A curious woman encounters enormous insects and an alluring man with bat wings in a surreal recollection of a pivotal journey.

INTERNATIONAL SHORT FILMS
This year’s collection of shorts offers a compelling look at stories from around the world. These include films about gang initiation, sexually active parents, love in the Paris metro, a strange substitute teacher, and a disastrous video diary.

Dramatic Shorts

A DAY OUT / South Korea (Director: Jong Yoon Lee)–Repressed sexual longings between a stern military sergeant and his submissive private come to a violent boil when the two spend a night with a prostitute in a motel room.

ASK THE INSECTS / Canada (Director: Steve Reinke)–Part homemade science (before it became doctrine and law), part animated video reverie, Reinke's brief and episodic compression is an incendiary release which opens by announcing the death of the reader, and ends with the death of the author.

CUBS / UK (Director: Tom Harper)–Ben is desperate to join a gang of inner city kids, but when he's finally given the chance, he discovers that initiation comes at a price.

DAD / UK (Director: Daniel Mulloy)–A husband and wife remain sexually active in later life to the disgust of their son, but who is it that has the problem?

FAMILY REUNION / Iceland (Director: Isold Uggadottir)–New York lesbian, Katrin, struggles to come out to her relatives back in Iceland, but revelations at a family reunion challenge all her assumptions.

GOODBYE MR. SNUGGLES / UK (Director: Jonathan Hopkins)–What could possibly go wrong when two elderly gentlemen go for a day's painting in the beautiful English countryside?

GRACELAND / Thailand (Director: Anocha Suwichakornpong)–One night in Bangkok, Jon and a mysterious women embark on a journey to a foreign land – the human heart.

HARD TO SWALLOW / UK (Director: Mat Kirkby)–Three couples share Sunday lunch...and certainly don't drink too much, fight or swear at each other.

I WANT TO BE A PILOT / Kenya (Director: Diego Quemada–Diez)–Deep in the slums of East Africa, Omondi has only one dream.

INDUCTION / Belgium (Director: Nicolas Provost)–The unexpected meeting of a shaman, a lonely woman and a young boy whose paths will cross and slip away in a labyrinth of unresolved mystery.

MAKE A WISH / Israel (Director: Cherien Dabis)–A young Palestinian girl will do anything it takes to buy a birthday cake.

MEN UNDERSTAND EACH OTHER BETTER / Iran (Director: Marjan Alizadeh)–A man gets a call from a friend seeking comfort when his wife hasn't arrived back home.

PEACE TALK / Sweden (Director: Jenifer Malmqvist)–Little Jonna and her friend Emilie play at being soldiers, but Jonna’s mother doesn’t approve of the course their game takes.

PENPUSHER / France (Director: Guillaume Martinez)–An unexpected spark of hope in the gray and ordinary Paris metro.

SALT KISS / Brazil (Director: Fellipe Gamarano Barbosa)–On a secluded island off of Rio, the carefree 45–year–old Rogério struggles to bring his recently engaged best friend back to the good life.

SOPHIE / Denmark (Director: Birgitte Stærmose)–After a pregnant wife asks her husband if he's ever been with a prostitute, their night takes a radical change.

THE SUBSTITUTE / Italy (Director: Andera Jublin)–The new substitute teacher in class is acting pretty strange.

THE TRAGIC STORY OF NLING / Canada (Director: Jeffrey St. Jules)–In his struggle to survive beyond the walls of slum city, a man soon finds that he is no more humane than his animal friend.

THE TUBE WITH A HAT / Romania (Director: Radu Jude)–A boy from a small village wakes up his father and persuades him to go to the city to fix their TV.

TROUT / UK (Director: Johnny Barrington)–A bizarre chain of events shakes up the otherwise quiet life between a young couple in the Scottish Highlands.

WILLIAM / Australia (Director: Eron Sheean)–On his taxi ride home, an indigenous sideshow magician encounters an unwelcome passenger forcing him to revisit a past he would rather forget.

Documentary Shorts

THE FENCE / Spain (Directors: Ricardo Iscar & Nacho Martin)–Every year, thousands of tuna fish migrate to the Mediterranean Sea where men chase them in a ritual of blood and death.

MASTER OF REALITY / UK (Director: Matthew Killip)–Now 19, Ronny reflects on the phantasmagoric childhood he obsessively documented.

MOTODROM / Germany (Director: Joerg Wagner)–The world of the hellriders in their wooden barrel: men and motorbikes, speed and stunts, gasoline and adrenaline.

TANJU MIAH (Director: Sadik Ahmed)–A young Bengali boy, forced to grow up in a world where he must fend for himself, awaits the return of his mother.

Animated Shorts

IN PASSING / UK (Directors: Christopher Thomas Allen & Robert Rainbow (The Light Surgeons))–An exploration of the psycho–geography of Manchester, England, through the experiences of a local woman who is partially blind.

DREAMS AND DESIRES – FAMILY TIES / UK (Director: Joanna Quinn)–Upon acquiring a new digital video camera, Beryl becomes obsessed with the filmmaking process, using it to articulate her dreams & desires in a video diary with disastrous results.

T.O.M. / UK (Directors: Tom Brown & Daniel Gray)–A journey of a young boy with an affinity for a little extra exposure.

This year’s short film program was selected by an expanded team of four programmers which includes: George Eldred, Director of Competition, Aspen Shortsfest; Shane Smith, former Artistic Director, World Wide Short Film Festival; Kimberly Yutani, Associate Director of Programming, Outfest; and Todd Luoto, Special Projects Director, Silver Lake Film Festival.

What’s New for the 2007 Sundance Film Festival:

New Frontier represents the evolution of the Frontier section exploring the experimental world of filmmaking. New Frontier is an expanded program that includes work from artists pushing the boundaries of art by using the moving image to create new cinematic modes of storytelling. The program includes films screening throughout the Festival, as well as media installations, media–based performances, and panel discussions at New Frontier on Main—a new venue located across from the Egyptian Theatre in the Main St. Mall formerly known as the Film Center. Artists whose work will be featured in the program are Paul Chan (multi–media installation), Shu Lea Cheang (interactive mobile media), Martha Colburn (multi–media installation), R. Luke Dubois (multi–media installation), Eric Dyer (multi–media installation), James Graham (multi–media installation), Ricardo Rivera and Pier Nicola D’Amico (multi–media installation), Lincoln Schatz (interactive video art), and Travis Wilkerson (multi–media performance).

Complete details for New Frontier were announced on November 30, 2006 and the venue will be introduced to the public with a grand opening ceremony on the afternoon of Thursday, January 18th, before the Festival’s Opening Night film.

· Music on Main — Music on Main is back! An outdoor concert featuring Of Montreal and Shiny Toy Guns will be held on lower Main Street on Thursday, January 25, 2007, 7:30–9:30 pm. Free to all festival–goers.


Festival Sponsors
The 2007 Sundance Film Festival sponsors help sustain the Sundance Institute's year–round programs to support independent artists, inspire risk–taking and encourage diversity in the arts. This year's Festival Sponsors include: Presenting Sponsors — Entertainment Weekly, Volkswagen of America, Inc., HP, Adobe, and AOL; Leadership Sponsors—American Express, Delta Air Lines, and DIRECTV.; Sustaining Sponsors—ABSOLUT®, Aquafina, Blockbuster Inc., CESAR® Canine Cuisine, KRUPS, L’Oreal Paris, The New York Times, Ray–Ban, Sony Electronics, Inc., Stella Artois®, Turning Leaf Vineyards, and the Utah Film Commission.

Sundance Film Festival
The Sundance Film Festival is the premier showcase for U.S. and international independent film. Held each January in Park City, Sundance Resort, Salt Lake City, and Ogden, Utah, the Festival is a core program of the Sundance Institute, a nonprofit cultural organization founded by Robert Redford in 1981.

Presenting 125 dramatic and documentary feature–length films in nine distinct categories and over 70 short films each year, the Sundance Film Festival has introduced American audiences to some of the most innovative films of the past two decades. The official website of the Sundance Film Festival, www.sundance.org shares the Festival experience beyond the streets of Park City with a global audience through the streaming of short films, filmmaker interviews, and current news and box office information.

Sundance Institute:
Dedicated year–round to the development of artists of independent vision and to the exhibition of their new work, Sundance Institute celebrates its 25th anniversary in 2006. Founded by Robert Redford in 1981, the Institute has grown into an internationally recognized resource for thousands of independent artists through its Film Festival and artistic development programs for filmmakers, screenwriters, composers, playwrights and theatre artists. The original values of independence, creative risk–taking, and discovery continue to define and guide the work of Sundance Institute, both with U.S. artists and, increasingly, with artists from other regions of the world