Tuesday, 30 June 2009

We Need A Farmer

We are very keen to invite members of the community to choose one of the films that will be shown at the festival and devise a short introduction to it. The film which you will introduce will be relevant to your work or interests. 

At the moment we are looking for a farmer who would like to watch a film about farming in North West France. It would be very interesting for a local farmer to see what the similarities and difference are between their way of life and your own.

We will work with you to write an introduction which we will then film you reading or someone else reading if you would prefer. Your short introductory film will then be shown before the main film. This is an important part of the festival as we would like to make all the films shown relevant to our community. 

If you are interested please contact Sam or Glenn at bricarts@googlemail.com 

Friday, 26 June 2009

Community Focus Group for Film Selection

We have begun the initial selection process for choosing the films to screen at the festival. These shortlisted films will soon be shown to a focus group made up of various members of the community in order for us to hear their thoughts and feedback before we finalise the selection. If you would like to become a member of the focus group please contact us using the details on the right hand side - we welcome all thoughts and ideas about the festival.


The three main criteria which we have used to select the films are as follows:


1. The film explores the rural landscape of Britain which makes us look at it in a thoughtful way.


2. If the film is from another country, it will make a distinct comparison with the British landscape in order for us to look at own landscape in a new way.


3. The film is suitable for an audience from a wide section of the community.


We these criteria in mind below you can see some of the films the next focus group will be discussing:


Sleep Furiously by Gideon Koppel


Winner of the Environment is the Quality of Life Prize at the 2008 Locarno International Film Festival.


This delicate film by Gideon Koppel is a love-letter to Trefeurig, the Welsh farming community in Ceredigion where he grew up, and where his parents found refuge from Nazi Germany during the second world war. It is a rural society at one with a landscape of stunning beauty, but in fact in crisis. Koppel's film takes as its starting point the closure of the local school, a definitive, calamitous loss for a place where shops and bus services have already vanished. The movie pays tribute to the grit of a people who may yet revive their economy, but it acknowledges a darker possibility, for which the sentimental note of an "elegy" is not appropriate. Slowly, but surely, Trefeurig appears to be dying, and Koppel's camera captures the consequent ripples of loss and regret.


Portrait of Ga by Margaret Tait




'My mother lives in the windy Orkney Isles. It's certainly a wonderful place to be brought up in' is the opening to this classic short film. It's a beautiful portrait of the filmmakers elderly mother but also a portrait of her beloved Orkney Islands in the 1950's. Margaret once said of her films, with characteristic modesty, that they are born of 'of sheer wonder and astonishment at how much can be seen in any place that you choose...if you really look'.


This film has been selected to show in the Scottish Landscape section of the festival when local conservationist Bill Shaw will deliver a talk about his summer on St Kilda which will introduce the magnificent film, The Edge of The World (see below).


The Edge of the World by Michael Powell



Powell based his script on the true story of the evacuation of thirty-six people from St. Kilda, an island ten miles off the west coast of Scotland, on 29 August 1930. The film was made over four months during the summer of 1936 on the island of Foula, in the Shetland Isles. Permission was denied to film on St. Kilda, which is in the Hebrides, and where they actually speak Gaelic, while on Foula they speak Norse. Powell was adamant that local people be in the film, and that it all be shot on location (which, except for some pick-up shots back at the studio, turned out to be the case).



Tuesday, 16 June 2009

Researching for the film: The Community Apple Press

As part of the film festival Samantha Allan has been commissioned to make a new film/installation for the entrance of the Victory Hall for the duration of the festival. Below she describes her initial thoughts:


"I want the piece to be a celebration of the village of Broughton-in-Furness. After moving to the area five years ago from London the main thing that has struck me is a sense of community organisation and how events and news travels through well trodden networks such as the post office window, the notice boards and the local newsletter. 


I love the simple idea that a group  can get together to do something and let people know and know other people will see it. It's a freedom that is missing from were I used to live. It's a cliche to say but sometimes it feels as if it's a hundred years ago here and I don't mean that in any derogatory way. It's a sense that there is space here to do things. Practical spaces like a large village hall for community events, another smaller hall, fields, old barns. It feels there is a strong,  sustainable community here. 


I have pinpointed one event in particular to become the focus of my new work. The Broughton Community Apple Press Association  was set up in 2005 by a group of residents after they were sick of seeing apples and other fruit being wasted because n0-one had the facility to press them. So now after fundraising and setting up the association this will be the fourth year that the press is taken to the small villages and hamlets of the area so people can come and bring their fruit to be pressed. It's inspiring to see new traditions being set up in the face of the demise of many rural communities. And it will make a strong focus for my film. 


I am working with Dick Palmer who is the chairman of the association and also SLOG (South Lakes Orchard Group) who have a fantastic knowledge of heritage fruits which are native to, or are commonly grown in, this area."


Bradley’s Beauty
Brownlee’s Russet
CaĆ­anska Posna
Duke of Devonshire
Egremont Russet
Gladstone
Scotch Bridget
Keswick Codlin
Lady’s Finger of Lancaster/Lancashire
Laxton Superb
Manx Codlin
Holstein
Old Pearmain
Queen
Rankthorne
Thomas Rivers
Taylor’s Favourite
Winter Banana
Yellow Ingestrie