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In addition to a full slate of masterclasses and panels on the creative processes and practices of nonfiction filmmaking, this year’s Points North Forum will advance industry-wide conversations about Story & Power-- asking critical questions about how the documentary film and media community reflects existing power structures, including questions of racial equity, access, funding, and which stories are being told, how, for whom, and by whom.
Points North is in a unique position to create a place of convergence for both industry gatekeepers and emerging storytellers, working together to challenge dominant perspectives, propose new vocabularies, aesthetics, and methods for documentary making.
The Forum’s 2019 centerpiece is a series of conversations and panels that explore how stakeholders in the nonfiction community - filmmakers, critics, gatekeepers, and even audiences - can take an active role in building and enjoying a more equitable, inclusive and creative documentary field.
For festival attendees interested in exploring the craft of documentary storytelling, the Forum program will feature two masterclasses with the directors of two of this year’s most critically acclaimed documentaries. Todd Douglas Miller will reveal the creative process behind his all-archival box office hit, APOLLO 11, and Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar will tell the story behind the making of AMERICAN FACTORY, including the deep community relationships they built that made the film possible.
An annual highlight of the Forum program is the standing room only Points North Pitch at Camden Opera House, where 6 filmmaking teams selected for the Points North Fellowship present their documentary features in development to panel of funders and distributors. Audience members will have the opportunity to support each of these films through a live crowdfunding campaign. Two alumni of the Fellowship and Pitch -- MIDNIGHT TRAVELER and MIDNIGHT FAMILY -- will be returning to screen at the festival after receiving support from funders they met through the program.
Points North Institute’s Artist Programs are designed to connect filmmakers with mentors, funders, and potential collaborators, using the Camden International Film Festival as a platform to build a community of support, nurture the careers of diverse nonfiction storytellers, and help them develop a stronger artistic voice.
These programs will bring four cohorts of early-career filmmakers to Maine for a full week of private creative and professional development workshops prior to the festival. They include the Points North Fellowship, the North Star Fellowship, the Shortform Editing Residency, and the 4th World Indigenous Media Lab Fellows, who are attending CIFF for the first time with support from the MacArthur Foundation.
The North Star Fellowship, in its 3rd year, supports five filmmakers from underrepresented backgrounds with weeklong mentorship and seminars, alongside travel and passes to attend CIFF, allowing them to develop a deeper connection with the documentary and nonfiction storytelling community and meaningfully advance their projects and careers. The program was developed in partnership with Kickstarter. Additional support is provided by Maine Media Workshops + College, which offers tuition scholarship to all 2019 North Star filmmakers.
The 4th edition of the Shortform Editing Residency, made possible by the MAE Private Foundation, convenes four filmmakers with short documentaries in post-production for a week of focused editing, workshops, and industry meetings.
As these fellowships and residencies have grown alongside industry attendance at the festival, Points North has developed a 1:1 Meetings program to provide opportunities for filmmakers to develop industry relationships. Sponsored by WORLD Channel | WGBH, the 1:1 Meetings program will connect 28 attending filmmakers with more than 25 industry decision makers, including representatives from NatGeo, CAA, RYOT, Participant Films, Fork Films, TOPIC, Tribeca Film Institute, the Sundance Institute, Cinereach, Sheffield Doc/Fest, ITVS, POV, Nia Tero Foundation, and more. Filmmakers participating in the 1:1 Meetings program include the 2019 BAVC Mediamaker Fellows and LEF Foundation’s LEF/CIFF Fellows, a group of New England based filmmakers attending with feature documentaries in development.
Sponsors of the Points North Forum and the Points North Institute’s Artist Programs include Showtime Documentary Films, National Endowment for the Arts, The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, LEF Foundation, WGBH / WORLD Channel, Kickstarter, RYOT Films, Chicago Media Project, NEON, Cohen Gardner LLP, Modulus Studios, Maine Media Workshops + College, School of Visual Arts MFA Social Documentary Film, Vermont College of Fine Arts and Documentary Educational Resources.
Full Forum Schedule and Industry Participants athttps://
Artist Programs selections at
https://pointsnorthinstitute.
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Audiences & Power: How to Watch a Doc
A conversation accompanied by film clips, in which critics, programmers, and filmmakers outline the ethics and esthetics of how audiences can decipher ways power is manifest in well-known nonfiction films, and raise questions that can help us to engage more actively with stories from near and far.
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Tayler Montague (Reverse Shot)
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Devika Girish (Film Comment)
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Robb Moss
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Moderator: Samara Chadwick (Points North Institute)
12pm - 1:30pm French Room
In a rapidly-changing distribution and funding landscape, the public media system has remained one of the most accessible platforms for documentaries to find funding and reach diverse audiences. In this panel, leading executives give an overview of how to navigate the broadcast strands, stations, and funds that make public media such a robust platform for independent filmmakers.
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Noland Walker (ITVS)
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Carmen Vicencio (American Documentary | America ReFramed)
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Pamela Torno (ITVS)
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Chris Hastings (World Channel | WGBH)
Subjects & Power: Director’s Commentary
We tend to gravitate towards stories of redemption and heroes who uphold our worldviews. But reality is often much more nuanced, and subjects have much at stake by participating in the filmmaking process. CIFF 2019 filmmakers play select scenes from their gorgeous and surprising films, and discuss ethical tensions that arose, how they handled them, and questions they wish they’d asked themselves in advance.
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Elke Margarete Lehrenkrauss (LOVEMOBIL)
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Ezequiel Yanco, Ana Godoy (LA VIDA EN COMÚN)
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Sam Ellison (CHÈCHE LAVI)
Film attorneys Paul Szynol (director/producer "The Pull,” "Quiet Hours") and Matt Rogers, partners at Brooklyn-based Rogers & Szynol, present an overview of legal issues faced by documentary filmmakers during the production cycle--from intellectual property licensing and fair use to collaborator contracts, investment strategies, and distribution. Includes extensive Q&A session.
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Paul Szynol
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Matt Rogers
Featuring a trio of artistically ambitious and politically evocative nonfiction filmmakers, this screening of clips and discussion hinges on two questions: How can the field of documentary make space for historically marginalized perspectives? And, can nonfiction cinema help us build more just, more honest, and more equitable spaces, or is the role of documentary to faithfully represent the world as it is?
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Brett Story (THE HOTTEST AUGUST)
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Sky Hopinka (LORE)
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Moderator: Jason Fox (World Records)
Friday 4pm - 5pm French Room
In this conversation, Alvaro Morales and Alex Suber discuss the tools, techniques, and design principles they employ to create evocative and poetic immersive documentary experiences.
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Alex Suber (LUX SINE)
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Alvaro Morales (HOME WITH AMÉRICA)
Points North Reception presented by LEF Foundation
10:00am - 12:30pm (Camden Opera House Auditorium)
Whether you’re a film professional or not, the Points North Pitch is an invaluable chance to learn about the process of developing a documentary film and see first-hand how leading decision makers evaluate projects. Six teams of filmmakers selected for the Points North Fellowship will pitch their works-in-progress to a distinguished panel of funders, broadcasters, distributors, and producers. Each pitch lasts exactly 7 minutes, followed by 12 minutes of constructive feedback.
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Callie Barlow (RYOT)
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Maxyne Franklin (Doc Society)
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Leah Giblin (Cinereach)
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Chris Hastings (World Channel | WGBH)
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Carrie Lozano (International Documentary Association)
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Monika Navarro (Tribeca Film Institute)
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Enrique Pedraza-Botero (Sundance Institute)
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Tracy Rector (Nia Tero)
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Carmen Vicencio (POV)
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Noland Walker (ITVS)
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Moderated by Brian Newman (Sub Genre)
Saturday 1:30pm - 3pm French Room
For decades, Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar have been making powerful and intimate films that chronicle the changing fabric of American life, often focusing on stories and people in their home state, Ohio. In this wide-ranging discussion, they will share lessons from this impressive body of work -- including the critically acclaimed AMERICAN FACTORY -- and reflect on the process of telling stories deeply rooted in community.
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Steve Bognar and Julia Reichert (AMERICAN FACTORY)
Saturday 1:30 - 3pm Tucker Room
Many films in this year’s program were tangibly transformed by the process of production - they are works that seemingly set out to tell a specific story and allowed themselves to be completely rerouted by the people and the processes of the shoot. In a tribute to the value of patient observation and active listening, we invite these filmmakers to discuss the moments that shook them, and how they went about reimagining new forms of narrative beyond conventional tropes.
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Vytautas Puidokas (EL PADRE MÉDICO)
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Lucie Viver (SANKARA IS NOT DEAD)
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Moderator: Juan Pablo González (CABALLERANGO)
Ja’Tovia Gary and Whitney Dow’s works both interrogate racial identity and power through seemingly simple but rarely asked questions: Do you feel safe in your body? How do you understand your own whiteness? In this conversation moderated by Sabaah Folayan (WHOSE STREETS?), two CIFF directors explore how new documentary forms might expand our capacities to talk about and confront racial injustice.
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Ja’Tovia Gary (THE GIVERNY DOCUMENT (SINGLE CHANNEL))
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Whitney Dow (THE WHITENESS PROJECT)
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Moderator: Sabaah Folayan
Sunday 11:00am - 12:30pm Rockport Opera House
Todd Douglas Miller’s APOLLO 11 is one of the year’s most critically acclaimed documentaries and a masterpiece of all-archival filmmaking. In this moderated conversation, featuring clips from the film, Miller will share the story of how he and his team unearthed 65mm NASA footage of the mission and constructed a visceral cinematic experience of an historic event.
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Todd Douglas Miller (APOLLO 11)
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Moderator: Robb Moss
Frank Moore was a performance artist who couldn't walk or talk. DEEP INSIDE THE SHAMAN’S DEN explores the controversial work, polyamorous lifestyle, and defiant spirit of an unsung countercultural figure whose legacy radiates to this day. With a playful and celebratory yet critical perspective, the film draws on Moore’s decades deep archive of recorded materials and extensive writings to tell the story of a provocative artist and his role in a fragmented society.
Directed by Keith Wilson
Produced by Emile Bokaer
The federal government searches America’s hinterlands for the one place willing and able to accept 77,000 tons of nuclear waste for 10,000 years. Within the communities sitting atop the candidate sites, dreams, disillusionments, and fortitudes emerge through stories of environmental ruin and resistance. Part dystopian exposé and part vérité tableau, TO USE A MOUNTAIN entwines the rural geographies of the atomic age with generations of farmers, miners, scientists, and activists.
Directed by Casey Carter
Produced by Colleen Cassingham
Can the process of art-making transform a community? ROLEPLAY follows a year in the life of a group of American college students as they confront rampant sexual violence and toxicity on their campus with an artistic experiment: using their experiences to craft an original theater piece aimed at spurring dialogue, healing, and culture change.
Directed by Katie Mathews
Produced by Katie Mathews, Jenny Mercein
When a young filmmaker tries to make a black comedy about the friendship between her estranged father and their family’s aging dog, she unintentionally films the sudden death of her brother and embarks on a seven-year journey through addiction, death, grief, and love. IN ANOTHER LIFE is an intimate portrayal of the moments and unknowable forces that shape our lives.
Directed by Grace Harper
Produced by Alistair Payne-James, Julia Nottingham
DRIVER immerses us in a vital community of female truck drivers. Threatened by routine sexual violence and bound by a system where multi-billion dollar megacarriers and oppressive regulatory regimes conspire to leave the individual driver powerless, Desiree and her fellow drivers band together to survive in an industry that views them as disposable. Despite miles of highway between them, their lives intersect on the road and off; they find strength and solidarity in one another.
Directed and Produced by Nesa Azimi
After seeing his village washed away by the collapse of a mining dam, an exile in Portugal attempts to digest the trauma through dance. A second dam breaks and an environmentalist is forced to leave her life of isolation for the international media spotlight. A school teacher keeps watch at night for the imminent break of a third dam that could bury his town in an estimated eight seconds. In the interval of three years, two mining tailings dams broke in Minas Gerais, Brazil, becoming the country worst socio environmental disasters.
Directed by Pedro de Filippis
Produced by Bronte Stahl
Iyabo Boyd (Producer, writer/director, founder of the Brown Girls Doc Mafia), Ja’Tovia Gary (The Giverny Document (Single Channel)), Mary Lampson (Editor), Sabaah Folayan (Whose Streets?), Sky Hopinka (Filmmaker and Associate Professor, Simon Fraser University), Tracy Rector (Indigenous Media Activist & Managing Director, Nia Tero Foundation), Elise McCave (Kickstarter)
Quyên Nguyen-Le (they/them) is a queer and gender nonconforming Vietnamese-American filmmaker whose narrative and documentary films have been shown in various film festivals, universities, art galleries, and community spaces internationally. Their forthcoming documentary was a recipient of CAAM's inaugural Documentaries for Social Change award.
Directed by Erin Semine Kökdil
Directed by Jason Osder
Edited by Reid Davenport
Directed by Mimi Wilcox
Directed by Ora DeKornfeld and Isabel Castro
Tracy Rector (Indigenous Media Activist & Managing Director, Nia Tero Foundation), Ja’Tovia Gary (The Giverny Document (Single Channel)), Mary Lampson (Editor), Sabaah Folayan (Whose Streets?), Sky Hopinka (Filmmaker and Associate Professor, Simon Fraser University), Monika Navarro (Tribeca Film Institute)
CAMILLE MANYBEADS TSO has been working in film for 13 years. After studying Film at Idyllwild Arts Academy, she worked with projects such as Project 562, Paper Rocket Productions, SuperFly, The Laura Flanders Show, and STAR Media Arts. She is currently in post production of a feature documentary on the impact energy corporations have on indigenous communities.
RAVEN TWO FEATHERS is a Two Spirit, Emmy award winning filmmaker. Their intertribal identity, mixed with various intersections, influences their work to be a safe haven for people in those communities, and a jumping off point for others in their road to understanding.
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