2020 Festival Kevon Pryce 2020 Festival Kevon Pryce

Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference Announces 2020 Award Winners and Event Results

ATLANTA, GA (October 8, 2020) — The 44th annual Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF) is proud to announce today the distinguished jury and audience award winners for the 2020 festival, which took place from September 17, 2020 – September 27, 2020.

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ATLANTA, GA (October 8, 2020) — The 44th annual Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF) is proud to announce today the distinguished jury and audience award winners for the 2020 festival, which took place from September 17, 2020 – September 27, 2020. Additionally, as the first major annual event to be held in Atlanta with an in-person component since the pandemic began, ATLFF is pleased to share event facts and figures resulting from its unique and innovative presentation.

Today’s announcement recognizes filmmakers in 10 categories for their achievements and cinematic excellence. Winners of the Narrative Short, Animated Short and Documentary Short Jury Awards not only proudly took home their awards, but now also qualify for the 2021 Oscar® short list. ATLFF is one of the few festivals in the country that is Oscar-qualifying in three or more categories.

The award winners were chosen by distinguished jurors from all backgrounds across the film industry. They include Danielle Deadwyler, an actress and filmmaker known from her roles in series such as “Atlanta” and HBO’s “Watchmen;” Dawn Porter, an award-winning filmmaker who recently directed JOHN LEWIS: GOOD TROUBLE; Toby Wilson, an art director for Sony Pictures Animation; and Logan Hill, a veteran arts journalist who has spent 20 years reporting for the likes of The New York Times, Rolling Stone and GQ; among over a dozen others.

2020 ATLANTA FILM FESTIVAL AWARD WINNERS

Best Narrative Feature:
THE KILLING OF TWO LOVERS, directed by Robert Machoian

Special Jury Award - Narrative Feature:
NAFI’S FATHER (BAAMUM NAFI), directed by Mamadou Dia

Best Documentary Feature:
OVERSEAS, directed by Sung-A Yoon

Best Narrative Short:
ARABIAN ALIEN, directed by Meshal Aljaser

Best Documentary Short:
WATER CHILD (MIZUKO), directed by Kira Dane & Katelyn Rebelo

Honorable Mention - Documentary Short:
COBY AND STEPHEN ARE IN LOVE, directed by Carlo Nasisse & Luka Yuanyuan Yang

Best Animated Short:
KAPAEMAHU, directed by Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Dean Hamer & Joe Wilson

Honorable Mention - Animated Short:
THE KITE (POUSTET DRAKA), directed by Martin Smatana

Honorable Mention - Animated Short:
SH_T HAPPENS, directed by Michaela Mihalyi & David Stumpf

Best Cinematography:
LOOKING FOR LIFE (CHÈCHE LAVI), cinematography by Sam Ellison

Honorable Mention - Cinematography:
MALPASO, cinematography by Juan Carlos Gómez 

Georgia Film Award:
BEAST BEAST, directed by Danny Madden

Filmmaker-to-Watch Award:
Rachel Harrison Gordon (BROKEN BIRD)

Audience Award Winners:

  • BEAST BEAST, directed by Danny Madden

  • CURTIS, directed by Chris Bailey

  • DADDIO, directed by Casey Wilson

  • BEST SELLER, directed by Nora Kirkpatrick

From a record-breaking 8,500+ submissions, ATLFF selected 148 works, a mix of narrative and documentary feature length films, short films and creative media, for the 2020 festival. Of the selected works, 55 percent were directed by a female, 20 percent had ties to Georgia and approximately 50 percent were directed by a person of color. In addition to the selected programming, ATLFF held ten Marquee screenings and 32 Creative Conference events.

Shifting from in-person screenings and events to a drive-in and digital format, the 2020 event drew approximately 27,000 total attendees. An estimated 4,250 people attended 50 drive-in screenings held at three venues (The Plaza, Dad’s Garage and Pullman Yard) during the 11-day festival. An additional 22,750 people streamed screenings from ATLFF’s virtual catalog of 127 films and 32 Creative Conference workshops, panels or Masterclasses.

With many of the drive-in screenings selling out, the virtual presentation of the film catalog also proved to be a success. Nearly three months’ worth of content was streamed during the festival, with viewers in 42 U.S. states and 14 nations across all six inhabited continents. The virtual format also allowed for 65 industry experts and professionals to participate in the Creative Conference, including writer and producer Damon Lindelof, who held a virtual Masterclass just days after winning 11 Emmy Awards for HBO’s “Watchmen.”

A full list of jury members with brief biographies is included in the attachment, as well as film information for all award winners and honorable mentions.

The 45th annual Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference is set to take place from April 22, 2021 – May 2, 2021. ATLFF is currently accepting submissions for the 2021 festival.

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2020 Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference Drive-In Screening Schedule Announced

ATLANTA, GA (September 4, 2020) — The Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), presented by WarnerMedia, is pleased to announce the schedule of selected drive-in screenings that will take place during the 44th annual event from Thursday, September 17 – Sunday, September 27, 2020.

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ATLANTA, GA (September 4, 2020) — The Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), presented by WarnerMedia, is pleased to announce the schedule of selected drive-in screenings that will take place during the 44th annual event from Thursday, September 17 – Sunday, September 27, 2020. The schedule revealed today represents a portion of the total 148 selected works that were chosen from a record-breaking 8,500+ submissions. In addition to the drive-in screenings, ATLFF will host virtual screenings and educational events throughout the 11-day festival.

There are 15 narrative and 10 documentary features, and 12 short film and creative media blocks that will screen at drive-in events. Among the announced drive-in screenings are films including THE OUTSIDE STORY, a comedy starring Brian Tyree Henry and Sonequa Martin-Green; IN THE COLD DARK NIGHT, a true-crime documentary feature set in Griffin, Georgia from filmmakers behind AMANDA KNOX and THE TED BUNDY TAPES; and the festival premiere of FANDANGO AT THE WALL, a documentary feature executive produced by Carlos Santana, Quincy Jones, and Andrew Young.

As an Academy Award®-qualifying film festival in the Animated, Narrative and Documentary short categories, ATLFF’s short film blocks represent some of most competitive juried categories at the festival. Notable shorts selections that will be shown at drive-in screenings include STUCCO, directed by Janina Gavankar and Russo Schelling in the “Late Night, Great Night” block; WHITE ECHO directed by Chloe Sevigny in the “Outta This World” block; and NIMIC from director Yorgos Lanthimos in the “Eat the Rich” block.

The screenings will feature works from ATLFF’s New Mavericks, ¡CineMás!, Noire, and Pink Peach specialty programming tracks—celebrating women, Latinx, Black and LGBTQ filmmakers and stories respectively. Approximately half of all of ATLFF’s selected works were directed by people of color and 20 percent of selected works have ties to Georgia.

The 2020 festival previously announced the shift to exclusively drive-in and virtual screenings and events to enable audiences in Atlanta and beyond to safely enjoy works from a diverse slate of more than 140 filmmakers. In addition to the 36 drive-in screenings announced today, 127 selected works will also play at the 2020 festival virtually. Marquee screenings will also join the lineup and will be announced at a later date.

Also to be announced is the full lineup of the 10th anniversary Creative Conference, the festival’s series of 20+ educational events. A key part of ATLFF’s programming, the 2020 Creative Conference will shift formats to virtual events, with a focus on Masterclass conversations and panels featuring accomplished directors, showrunners, producers, writers, actors, production designers, editors and more. The educational programming will cover a wide range of topics including virtual pitching, development, creating family friendly content, marketing, digital branding, podcasting, and sales and distribution. Industry experts participating in the Creative Conference this year have credits including “The Walking Dead”, “Greenleaf”, “All American”, “Lovecraft Country”, and LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE.

Pullman Yard (225 Rogers St NE, Atlanta, GA 30317) will join The Plaza Theatre (1049 Ponce De Leon Ave NE, Atlanta, GA 30306) and Dad’s Garage (569 Ezzard St SE, Atlanta, GA 30312), as the third drive-in screening venue.  

To view the schedule of films announced today, please visit https://atlantafilmfestival.com/schedule or download the all new Atlanta Film Festival app in the App Store or Google Play. ATLFF badges are now on sale on the festival’s website. Ticketing access is now open to badge holders. Individual ticket sales will open next week. Unlimited access to virtual screenings and events is available as well. 

The Atlanta Film Festival is the annual centerpiece of educational and enriching film programming that is provided year-round by its parent organization, the Atlanta Film Society (ATLFS). The festival was originally scheduled to take place in the spring but was postponed due to precautions surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. 

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2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition Winners

The Atlanta Film Festival is proud to announce the winners of the 2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition. Chosen from nearly 1,300 total submissions, 260 quarterfinalists, 130 semifinalists, and 24 finalist scripts, these 5 screenplays represent those who will receive unique mentorship opportunities to help hone their craft and plan the next steps in their careers.

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2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition Winners

The Atlanta Film Festival is proud to announce the winners of the 2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition. Chosen from nearly 1,300 total submissions, 260 quarterfinalists, 130 semifinalists, and 24 finalist scripts, these 5 screenplays represent those who will receive unique mentorship opportunities to help hone their craft and plan the next steps in their careers.

Feature Film Screenplays

BATTLE CRIES - Karen Walker

A powerful coming of age true story tribute of a military veteran who uses her love of the game to rise above tragedy and political pitfalls finding herself leading Marines on the battlefront once again.

THE RAT AND THE BLUEBIRD - T.E. Strong

A western tale set in a high fantasy backdrop. An ex-outlaw turned sheriff must come to terms with the mistakes of his past to unravel the mystery of his daughter's kidnapping and put an end to the madness he created.

THE SCHTICK-UP - Val Bodurtha

A group of young Jewish friends plan a heist on a Swiss Bank to steal back long-lost Nazi gold.

Pilot Screenplay

BIRDSONG - Jennifer Dunn

A mountain witch who fled the secretive world of evangelical faith healing now medicates away the supernatural powers that plague her. But when her beloved Granny and mentor is threatened, she must re-enter the world she so narrowly escaped.

Short Screenplay

DUNKED - John Bickerstaff

A closeted teen takes swimming lessons to prepare for his full-immersion baptism.

Congratulations to these promising screenwriters!

The 2021 Screenplay Competition is currently open for entries and amazingly already has more applications than the total for 2020. Should you like to be considered to serve on the Reading Committee, please email screenplay@atlantafilmfestival.com.

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Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference Announces Drive-In and Virtual Format

ATLANTA, GA (August 13, 2020) — The Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), presented by WarnerMedia, announced today that format of the 2020 event will shift to drive-in & digital screenings and virtual educational events.

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ATLANTA, GA (August 13, 2020) — The Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), presented by WarnerMedia, announced today that format of the 2020 event will shift to drive-in & digital screenings and virtual educational events. The 44th edition of ATLFF + 10th annual Creative Conference will take place Thursday, September 17 – Sunday, September 27, 2020. The annual film festival and educational conference traditionally take place each spring with in-person events and screenings but was postponed and adjusted due to precautions surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The modified format of this year’s festival will allow audiences in Atlanta and beyond to safely enjoy screenings from a diverse slate of approximately 150 filmmakers over 11 days. With unparalleled access to screenings digitally and approximately 20 events planned for the virtual Creative Conference, ATLFF will continue to provide filmmakers and film lovers with a memorable, meaningful experience. 

“The Atlanta Film Festival’s commitment to providing a platform for filmmakers from around the world to showcase their work spans more than four decades. Providing a spotlight on talented and often under-represented filmmakers, as well as enriching educational experiences, during the annual event remains a pillar of our organization’s mission,” said Christopher Escobar, Executive Director of ATLFF. “However, as 2020 has shown us, nothing is more important than the health and well-being of our filmmakers, attendees, staff and volunteers. When presented with the opportunity to pivot to a virtual format with select drive-in screenings, it became obvious that this adjustment was the only way to achieve our goals this year.” 

Drive-in screenings will primarily take place at The Plaza Theatre (1049 Ponce De Leon Ave NE, Atlanta, GA 30306) and Dad’s Garage (569 Ezzard St SE, Atlanta, GA 30312), with additional venues to be announced. Health protocols and social distancing will be followed to ensure safe and comfortable events for all attendees.  Additionally, ATLFF will present a slate of films and selected works through a digital platform for the first time. Providing accessibility to audiences across the country, ATLFF has partnered with Eventive to host virtual film screenings. 

Earlier this year, ATLFF announced the lineup of creative works, feature-length and short films selected from a record-breaking 8,500+ submissions for the 2020 event. The announced 148 selected works included a mix of narrative and documentary feature-length films, short films and creative media. A number of these works were planned world premieres. Though ATLFF intends to present the lineup as announced, films are subject to change and the final schedule is forthcoming.  

The 10th annual Creative Conference, a 5-day series of educational events, remains a key part of ATLFF’s programming and will take place virtually. The festival will again host some of the top professionals in the entertainment industry to share their latest ideas, innovations and observations. 

"In the last decade, ATLFF’s attendance has more than tripled to approximately 30,000 attendees over the 11-day festival. This growth is undeniably due the talent we are honored to showcase through film, the outstanding filmmaking community that comes together to present resourceful educational workshops and, of course, the unwavering support of passionate Atlantans,” ATLFF Programming Director Alyssa Armand stated. “While we will miss seeing many attendees in-person this year, we are immensely proud and excited to present the same quality of film and events to a virtual audience in our beloved city and across the country.”

In addition to the full lineup of Creative Conference events and a final schedule of film programming, announcements about special guests and Marquee screenings will be shared on the festival’s website as they are confirmed. 

Individual ticket sales will be available for drive-in screenings ($15-50 per car, pending number of guests), virtual screenings and Creative Conference events ($9.99 per screening/event). Unlimited virtual screening access or unlimited virtual Creative Conference access will be available for $50 each, or unlimited access to both will be available for $75. Festival badges (varying costs and access) will also be available again this year. On sale dates are forthcoming.   

Additional announcements will be made as programming is added to the 2020 ATLFF lineup..

The Atlanta Film Festival is the annual centerpiece of educational and enriching film programming that is provided year-round by its parent organization, the Atlanta Film Society (ATLFS).

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Atlanta Film Festival Announced 10Best Film Festival by USA Today

ATLFF is proud to once again be selected as one of USA Today's top ten film festivals!

Now in its fourth decade, the Atlanta Film Festival—one of only two-dozen Academy Award® qualifying festivals in the U.S.—is the area’s preeminent celebration of cinema.

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ATLFF is proud to once again be selected as one of USA Today's top ten film festivals!

Now in its fourth decade, the Atlanta Film Festival—one of only two-dozen Academy Award® qualifying festivals in the U.S.—is the area’s preeminent celebration of cinema.  The Atlanta Film Festival is one of the largest and longest-running festival in the country, welcoming an audience of over 28,000 to discover hundreds of new independent, international, animated, documentary, and short films, selected from 8000+ submissions from all over the world.  It is also the most distinguished event in its class, recognized as Best Film Festival by Creative Loafing, Sunday Paper, 10Best and Atlanta Magazine.

The Atlanta Film Festival is a membership-based 501(c)(3) arts non-profit  with a mission to lead the community, both locally and worldwide, in creative and cultural discovery through the moving image.  ATLFF presents a diverse slate of year-round offerings for film-lovers, filmmakers, and industry professionals.  Year round programs —screenings, parties, panels, workshops, and other educational events –provide a forum for building the community of film lovers and film supporters.  By bringing audiences and filmmakers together, the Festival has the opportunity to broaden the perspective of both artists and moviegoers.

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Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference Reveals New Dates and Official Selections for 2020 Event

ATLANTA, GA (March 26, 2020) — The Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), presented by WarnerMedia, announced today that the 44th annual event will now take place from Thursday, September 17 – Sunday, September 27, 2020.

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The 2020 Atlanta Film Festival will now take place from Thursday, September 17 – Sunday, September 27, 2020

ATLANTA, GA (March 26, 2020) — The Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), presented by WarnerMedia, announced today that the 44th annual event will now take place from Thursday, September 17 – Sunday, September 27, 2020. The festival was originally scheduled to take place in the spring, but was postponed last week due to precautions surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to the date announcement, the festival has also shared the lineup of creative works, feature-length and short films selected from a record-breaking 8,500+ submissions for the 2020 event.

“We are committed now more than ever to presenting a 2020 Atlanta Film Festival that represents the talent, passion and resilience of the city of Atlanta,” said Christopher Escobar, Executive Director of ATLFF. “While we are disappointed that we are not able to share the stellar lineup announced today as we originally planned in the spring, we are grateful to our sponsors, filmmakers, and supporters for their enthusiasm and dedication that have made it possible for the festival to move to September. We recognize that this is an already busy time of year, and hope to collaborate with as many existing events and organizations as possible to present a 2020 event that truly represents all that Atlanta has to offer.”

The selected works include 38 feature length films, 86 short films and 24 creative media that will be presented during the 11-day festival. This is in addition to the six narrative and documentary features announced in January as the first wave. Five winning screenplays from the screenplay competition will also be announced at a later date. Though ATLFF intends to present the lineup as announced, films are subject to change. 

Among the works announced today, there are 20 narrative and 18 documentary features, 14 short film blocks, as well as music videos and virtual reality experiences from the creative media category. Fourteen films are slated to have their world premieres at the festival.

A forthcoming slate of Marquee screenings & Creative Conference events, including Opening and Closing Night presentations, as well as Special Presentations will also join the lineup.

"The programming team, with the support of a multitude of volunteer screeners, has been working since last May to review thousands of submissions in order to select the 148 works announced today,” ATLFF Programming Director Alyssa Armand stated. “Revealing our lineup so soon after the announcement of our postponement is bittersweet, but we are proud to acknowledge the work of the filmmakers we have selected for this year’s festival along with the new dates.”

The 10th annual Creative Conference, a five-day series of 40+ educational events, will remain a key part of ATLFF’s programming. The festival will again host some of the top professionals in the entertainment industry to share their latest ideas, innovations and observations. The Creative Conference lineup of panelists and moderators are expected to be finalized and announced as the September event nears.

With diversity in programming being a cornerstone of ATLFF, this year’s selections have continued with that tradition. In 2020, 55 percent of the selected works are directed by female filmmakers, and more than half are directed by filmmakers of color. These numbers are up 5 percent and 10 percent, respectively, from 2019.

Works from 118 different countries were submitted for the 2020 festival, and 40 countries are represented in the chosen lineup. ATLFF also recognizes the cultural and filmmaking importance of its home state, and with that, approximately 20 percent of the works have ties to the state of Georgia.

Specialty tracks of New Mavericks, which celebrates female excellence in film, ¡CineMás!, which focuses on Latin American culture, and Pink Peach, which features films with LGBTQ stories and characters, all return in 2020.  

“We are thrilled that for the fifth year in a row, a record number of diverse and incredibly talented filmmakers and artists submitted works to our festival,” Escobar continued. “Our selections bring the most compelling visual storytelling the world has to offer to Atlanta, while also representing the rich diversity of the city itself.”

The Atlanta Film Festival is the annual centerpiece of educational and enriching film programming that is provided year-round by its parent organization, the Atlanta Film Society (ATLFS). Now in its fifth decade, ATLFF was recently named in USA Today’s ‘10Best Film Festivals’ Reader’s Poll for the second year in a row.

Festival badges, Creative Conference badges and IMAGE Film Awards Gala tickets are on sale now at www.AtlantaFilmFestival.com. Any previously purchased badges will be honored for the new dates. For people that can no longer attend the festival and have already purchased badges for the original dates, the festival has relaxed its refund policy. Please visit the website and the FAQ page for details on refunds.

Additional announcements will be made as programming is added to the 2020 ATLFF lineup. ATLFS and ATLFF will continuously monitor the COVID-19 pandemic and follow guidelines from leaders and experts, and issue any event updates as needed. To stay up-to-date, please visit the website and follow the festival on social media via Facebook (@atlantafilmfestival), Twitter (@atlantafilmfest) and Instagram (@atlantafilmfestival).

NARRATIVE FEATURES

BLACK CONFLUX
directed by Nicole Dorsey
Canada, 2020, English, 100 minutes
15-year-old Jackie is a model student, but the legacy of a broken home has her surrendering to adolescent temptations. Continually plagued by the failures of the women of her family, her mindset gradually shifts as she actively decides to escape a seemingly inevitable future. Dennis, socially inept and isolated by his inability to connect, escapes the reality of his solitude by imagining a fantasy world in which visions of adoring women surround him. These seemingly separate lives converge in this haunting exploration of womanhood, isolation, and toxic masculinity.
[New Mavericks]

CATCHING UP
directed by Bill Crossland
USA, 2019, English, 107 minutes
Frank, a romantically inexperienced high school teacher with muscular dystrophy, pretends to be dating his best friend so her parents won’t find out she’s gay. But when his able-bodied childhood crush moves back to town, his desire for a real relationship is unexpectedly awakened.
[Pink Peach]

CLIMATE OF THE HUNTER
directed by Mickey Reece
USA, 2019, English, 81 minutes
Contentious sisters Alma and Elizabeth are taking some quiet time in their family’s cabin. Their issues are dredged up by the reappearance of Wesley, a man from their youth. Whilst staying next door, his odd behavior leads local weirdo BJ to suspect there’s something supernatural to blame. Soon the seed of doubt starts to take root in Alma. Has Wesley returned from his globe-trotting adventures a vampire, or are Alma’s delusions overtaking her reality?

CURTIS
directed by Chris Bailey
USA, 2020, English, 80 minutes
Suffering from schizophrenia, a former basketball star is triggered down a dark path when he discovers his championship ring is missing. With the help of a young boy in the neighborhood, he scours the streets of Detroit for it, only to find himself stuck in a time warp and unable to come to grips with life as it is now.
[World Premiere]

FREELAND
directed by Mario Furloni & Kate McLean
USA, 2020, English, 80 minutes
An aging pot farmer suddenly finds her world shattered as she races to bring in what could be her final harvest, fighting against the threat of eviction as the impact of the legalization of the cannabis industry rapidly destroys her idyllic way of life. Shot on off-the-grid pot farms during the actual harvest, this emotional thriller is embedded with a deep and empathetic authenticity.
[In Competition]

FULLY REALIZED HUMANS
directed by Joshua Leonard
USA, 2020, English, 74 minutes
With less than a month until the birth of their first child, Jackie and Elliot embark on a madcap mission of self-discovery in attempt to rid themselves of the inherited dysfunction of their own upbringings. This crusade will push them to the edge of sanity, forcing them to do battle with themselves, each other, their friends and even their families. And when the smoke clears, they’ll either be the world’s greatest parents... or they’ll be institutionalized.

GIRAFFE
directed by Anna Sofie Hartmann
Germany/Denmark, 2019, German/Danish/Polish/English, 87 minutes
A tunnel will be built to connect Denmark and Germany. Dara, an ethnologist, arrives to document the houses tagged for demolition, interacting with the residents who are about to lose their homes and generations worth of history. Dara becomes engrossed in these stories and in the memories lingering in buildings that will soon disappear. When she meets Lucek, a young man from Poland working to prepare the construction site, she finds herself embarking on an unexpected romance that will ultimately reflect the transience of their surroundings.
[New Mavericks]

GOLDEN ARM
directed by Maureen Bharoocha 
USA, 2020, English, 90 minutes
Melanie is a baker in a small town, struggling with debt and a major case of the blahs caused by her failed marriage. When her ex demands half her grandmother’s bakery in their divorce, Melanie has no other choice but to take her best friend Danny’s advice – to enter the Ladies Arm Wrestling Championship. It just might work if Melanie can toughen up and take down the reigning champ, Danny’s arch nemesis, Brenda “The Bonecrusher” Smith!
[Georgia Film] [New Mavericks]

THE KILLING OF TWO LOVERS
directed by Robert Machoian
USA, 2020, English, 84 minutes
David desperately tries to keep his family of six together during a separation from his wife. They both agree to see other people but David struggles to grapple with his wife's new relationship. Now living with his father, his mental health begins to deteriorate and paranoia consumes his sense of hope, forcing him to confront personal demons in order to save his family and future.
[In Competition]

LUCKY GRANDMA
directed by Sasie Sealy
USA, 2020, Mandarin/English/Cantonese, 87 minutes
In the heart of Chinatown, New York, an ornery, chain-smoking, newly widowed 80-year-old Grandma is eager to live life as an independent woman. When a local fortune teller predicts a most auspicious day in her future, Grandma goes all in at the casino, only to land herself on the wrong side of luck and the target of some local gangsters. Desperate to protect herself, Grandma employs the services of a bodyguard from a rival gang and soon finds herself right in the middle of a Chinatown gang war.
[New Mavericks]

MALPASO
directed by Héctor Valdez
Dominican Republic, 2020, Spanish/Creole, 80 minutes
Cándido and Braulio are twin brothers growing up near the border of Haiti in the Dominican Republic. While Braulio helps their grandfather sell coal in the border market of Malpaso, Cándido leads a lonely existence secluded in his home due to his albinism. Their life takes an unexpected turn for the worse after their grandfather's sudden death, and Braulio will now need to look after his brother by making ends meet in Malpaso. All the while Cándido dreams of the return of their absent father.
[Cinemás] [In Competition]

MILKWATER
directed by Morgan Ingari
USA, 2020, English, 101 minutes
Seeking direction and purpose, Milo rashly decides to become a surrogate and egg donor for Roger, an older gay man she meets in a bar. However, as Milo becomes increasingly attached to Roger, she starts leveraging the pregnancy as a means of staying embedded in his life, gradually alienating herself from her friends when they try to address her erratic behavior. As Roger draws lines in the sand, Milo must figure out how to navigate the intensity of entering into a surrogacy with a stranger.
[In Competition] [World Premiere]

THE MISEDUCATION OF BINDU
directed by Prarthana Mohan
USA, 2019, English/Hindi, 92 minutes
15-year-old Bindu, desperate to escape her high school bullies, forges her mother's signature to test out of school. When she discovers she must pay a hefty fee by the end of the day in order to take the test, Bindu is forced to interact with the students she is so desperate to escape from.
[New Mavericks]

MY HEART CAN’T BEAT UNLESS YOU TELL IT TO
directed by Jonathan Cuartas
USA, 2020, English, 86 minutes
Dwight and Jessie find themselves at odds over care for their frail and sickly younger brother Thomas, who only lives off human blood. Leaving a trail of corpses in their wake, Dwight wrestles with the ramifications of what it takes to keep his brother alive. As Dwight begins to distance himself from his siblings, the relentless Jessie will do whatever it takes to keep the family together.
[In Competition]

NAFI’S FATHER (BAAMUM NAFI)
directed by Mamadou Dia
Senegal/USA, 2019, Fulah, 107 minutes
Tokara wants to marry his cousin, the beautiful Nafi, bringing their fathers into conflict with one another. Nafi's father is a high-ranking clergyman while Tokara's father is a candidate for Mayor of the small town in Senegal they all call home. Initially, the fathers' fraternal struggle seems to be all about the happiness of their children, but gradually it transpires that Tokara and Nafi are pawns in a bitter dispute about tradition, progress and the true nature of Islam. Can their family ties help them overcome these ideological differences?
[In Competition]

THE ORPHANAGE (PARWARESHGAH)
directed by Shahrbanoo Sadat
Afghanistan/Tajikistan/Denmark/France/Luxembourg, 2019, Hindi/Russian/Urdu, 100 minutes
In the late 1980s, 15-year-old Qodrat lives in the streets of Kabul and sells cinema tickets on the black market. He is a big Bollywood fan and he daydreams himself into some of his favourite movie scenes. One day, the police bring him to the Soviet orphanage. The political situation in Kabul is changing. Qodrat and his fellow orphans want to defend their home.

THE OUTSIDE STORY
directed by Casimir Nozkowski
USA, 2020, English, 86 minutes
Charles Young (Brian Tyree Henry) is an introverted video editor trying to recover from a broken heart. Perceiving a betrayal of trust as a sign his girlfriend Isha (Sonequa Martin-Green) is leaving him, Charles preemptively blows up his relationship and sequesters himself at home. When Charles accidentally locks himself out of his apartment, he is quite literally forced out of his comfort zone and must interact with the neighbors he has long avoided. With no shoes, no money, a phone running low on battery, Charles finds himself embarking on a transformative odyssey within his own community.
[Georgia Film]

THE OUTSIDERS FOOTBALL CLUB (LOS AJENOS FÚTBOL CLUB)
directed by Juan Camilo Pinzon
Colombia, 2019, Spanish, 91 minutes
Four quirky retired sailors transform an old shipyard into a home, intending to spend the last of their days there together. When one of them dies, they learn he was the rightful owner of their property when his estranged daughter, Martina, arrives to collect her inheritance. Finding that her father left behind a mountain of debt that prevents her from selling the shipyard, Martina signs the three tenants up for a soccer competition in order to win enough money to pay off their debt. This unlikely family must do the impossible in order to save their home.
[Cinemás]

TEST PATTERN
directed by Shatara Michelle Ford
USA, 2019, English, 82 minutes
Renesha and Evan's relationship is put to the test after Renesha is sexually assaulted and Evan drives from hospital to hospital in search of a rape kit. Part psychological horror, part realist drama, TEST PATTERN is set against the backdrop of our national discussion about an inequitable health system, #metoo, and race relations in America.
[In Competition] [New Mavericks]

THE VICE GUIDE TO BIGFOOT
directed by Zach Lamplugh
USA, 2020, English, 83 minutes
A paranormal comedy that follows a hopelessly millennial reporter on the most important assignment of his career: Bigfoot. But after following a prominent cryptozoologist into the Appalachian foothills, he's forced to answer the question "is a good story worth dying for?"
[Georgia Film]

DOCUMENTARY FEATURES

ANBESSA
directed by Mo Scarpelli
Ethiopia/Italy/USA, 2019, Amharic, 86 minutes
Ten-year-old Asalif and his mother have been displaced from their Ethiopian farmland by the massive construction of a condominium. Now living on the divide between a new and ancient world, they are reminded that their country’s big dream of “progress” is not for them. Land developers come knocking while ferocious hyenas lurk in a dark forest. Faced with these threats, Asalif transforms into a lion (“anbessa” in Amharic) to fight back. His newfound power takes him to places he never imagined inside and out of the condo until finally, he must shed the lion persona to find his own strength inside. The film vibrantly mirrors its subject’s imagination to paint an urgent and caring portrait of those cast aside by the processes of modernization.

CINEMA PAMEER
directed by Martin von Krogh
Afghanistan/Sweden, 2020, Dari/Pashto, 80 minutes
A film about a cinema, the passionate people working there, and their unrelenting love of film in a harsh conflict-ridden city. CINEMA PAMEER explores everyday life in a country torn apart through a cinema in downtown Kabul, Afghanistan – a place for escape, inspiration, and refuge in a city still trying to find its footing after decades of war, poverty, and religious fundamentalism. This feel good story follows the well-meaning denizens of the cinema in their everyday struggle to provide a safe haven for their countrymen.
[In Competition]

FANDANGO AT THE WALL
directed by Varda Bar-Kar
Mexico/USA, 2020, Spanish/English, 93 minutes
FANDANGO AT THE WALL follows Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra founder/conductor Arturo O'Farrill to the remotest regions of Veracruz, Mexico, where he meets and jams with the masters of son jarocho. Son jarocho is 300-year-old folk music rooted in the land that combines Indigenous, Spanish and African traditions. After Arturo's inspiring journey to a place where time seems to stands still, he and his orchestra join the masters of son jarocho at the music and dance festival Fandango Fronterizo which takes place simultaneously on both sides of the United States-Mexico border, transforming an object that divides into one that unites. Fandango at the Wall reveals a Mexico seldom depicted and shows how art and culture can bring our countries and people together.
[Georgia Film]

FLANNERY
directed by Elizabeth Coffman & Mark Bosco, S.J.
USA, 2020, English, 97 minutes
A lyrical, intimate exploration of the life and work of author Flannery O’Connor and how her distinctive Southern Gothic spin on Bible-thumping prophets and murderous Misfits influenced a generation of artists and activists. With her family home at Andalusia (the Georgia farm where she grew up and later wrote her best known work) as a backdrop, a picture of the woman behind her sharply aware, starkly redemptive style comes into focus. Including conversations with those who knew her and those inspired by her, FLANNERY employs never-before-seen archival footage, newly discovered personal letters and her own published words alongside original animations and music to celebrate the life and legacy of an American literary icon.
[Georgia Film]

FOR THE LOVE OF RUTLAND
directed by Jennifer Maytorena Taylor
USA, 2020, English, 92 minutes
Set in a blue-collar New England town, FOR THE LOVE OF RUTLAND explores small town America as a complex microcosm of our current national and global reality. An attempt to bring new life to an economically struggling, overwhelmingly white community – through refugee resettlement – unleashes deep partisan rancor within the city’s small population of 15,000. After a lifetime of being invalidated for her poverty and addiction, Stacie emerges as an unexpected and resilient leader in a community divided by class, culture, and the toxic politics of today.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

HOPE FROZEN
directed by Pailin Wedel
Thailand/USA, 2019, Thai/English, 76 minutes
A Thai-Buddhist couple struggles to find closure after cryopreserving their two-year-old daughter Einz. After her death from brain cancer, her family stores her remains in an American lab, her head and brain now resting inside a tank in Arizona. The girl’s father, a laser scientist, yearns to give Einz the opportunity to experience a rebirth inside a regenerated body. He instills this dream inside his son, a 15-year-old whiz kid named Matrix, who wants to be a part of reviving his little sister. But what the boy later discovers will rattle the family's radical hope in science.

I AM SAMUEL
directed by Pete Murimi
Kenya, 2020, English/Swahili/Luhya, 70 minutes
Filmed vérité style over 5 years, I AM SAMUEL is an intimate portrait of a Kenyan man torn between balancing duty to his family with his dreams for his future.
[In Competition]

LOOKING FOR LIFE (CHÈCHE LAVI)
directed by Sam Ellison
Mexico/USA/Haiti, 2019, Haitian Creole/Spanish, 76 minutes
A lyrical portrait of two Haitian migrants, Robens and James, who find themselves stranded at the US-Mexico border with no way forward and no one to depend on but each other. The quiet, unexpected tenderness of their friendship shines in the eye of an incomprehensible geopolitical storm, even as the two men drift towards drastically different futures and as a new border wall rises on the horizon. This is a film about longing: for a place to fit in, for a stable life, for connection and companionship. It isn’t about crossing borders; it’s about how it feels when you can’t get across. It’s about what happens when you end up in a totally unexpected place and you have to start over.

ONCE UPON A TIME IN VENEZUELA
directed by Anabel Rodriguez Rios
Venezuela/United Kingdom/Brazil/Austria, 2020, Spanish, 99 minutes
Once upon a time, the Venezuelan village of Congo Mirador, floating on stilts just inches above the deep Lake Maracaibo, was prosperous, alive with fishermen and poets. In recent years, it has decayed and disintegrated, rotting beneath pollution and neglect—a small but prophetic reflection of Venezuela itself. Director Anabel Rodríguez Ríos’s striking and mournful ode to her country bears first hand witness to the irreversible consequences of government corruption, while simultaneously capturing the resilient spirit of those most directly affected by Venezuela’s profound economic and political crises.
[Cinemás] [New Mavericks] [In Competition]

OVERSEAS
directed by Sung-A Yoon
Philippines/Belgium/France, 2019, Tagalog/English/Ilongo, 90 minutes
In the Philippines, women get deployed abroad to work as domestic workers or nannies. In order to do so, they frequently leave their own children behind, before throwing themselves into the unknown. In one of the many training centers dedicated to domestic work that can be found in the Philippines, a group of trainees are getting ready to face both homesickness and the possible abuses lying ahead. During role playing exercises, they alternatively play both the roles of the employee and that of the employers. Bordering on fiction, OVERSEAS brings to light the question of modern servitude in our globalized world, while emphasizing these women’s determination, their sisterhood, and the strategies they find to face the ordeals that awaits them in the near future.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

PIER KIDS
directed by Elegance Bratton
USA, 2019, English, 84 minutes
Director Elegance Bratton offers an intimate and strikingly raw portrait of New York City's underground community of pier kids, introducing us to Krystal, Desean, and Casper, three homeless queer black youth searching for stability in a harsh city. As they reconcile the love of chosen families with the cold complexities of biological ones, their struggle to find stable housing takes center stage, leading them to risky ventures and inhibiting them from passionate pursuits. Filmed over five years at the pier, on the streets, and in the ballroom scene, PIER KIDS is a sweeping, empathetic, and emotional look at the struggles of queer youth after they're expelled from their homes.
[Pink Peach]

THE REVENGE OF THE DIVA (SIVANDIVAN)
directed by Gustav Ahlgren & Emelie Jönsson
Sweden, 2019, Swedish, 80 minutes
At the height of fame and fortune, internationally acclaimed opera singer Siv Wennberg aka Siv the Diva suffered a gross betrayal and disappeared from the public eye. She is an uncompromising artist who refused to adapt to the norm of how a female artist should behave. And for that, she has had to pay dearly. She is now 77, has no family, no money and no fame. In the opera community she is an outcast. Some 30 years later she’s back, looking for revenge. A story about feminism, love and never ever giving up.

RING OF DREAMS
directed by Willem Baptist
The Netherlands, 2019, Dutch, 70 minutes
In a world where fantasy meets reality, Tengkwa leads a band of Dutch show wrestlers and tries to train a new generation of super heroes. With slim chances of fame and glory and little money to speak of, only the most die-hard of them will succeed. RING OF DREAMS tells the story of fighting for your dreams against the odds of our dreary daily lives.

SOCKS ON FIRE
directed by Bo McGuire
USA, 2020, English, 93 minutes
A poet composes a cinematic love letter to his grandmother as his homophobic aunt and drag queen uncle wage war over her estate in Hokes Bluff, Alabama. SOCKS ON FIRE is a transgenerational docudrama told through a series of stylized reenactments spun with family VHS footage and colorful interviews. The film documents the fluidity of identity, personality, and performance in the director Bo McGuire's hometown among his Mama’s people.
[Pink Peach] [In Competition]

SOME KIND OF HEAVEN
directed by Lance Oppenheim
USA, 2020, English, 83 minutes
Behind the gates of a palm tree-lined fantasyland, four residents of America’s largest retirement community, The Villages, FL, strive to find happiness and meaning. Referred to as the “Disneyland for Retirees,” this planned retirement community offers residents a utopian version of the American yesteryear. While most residents have bought into its packaged positivity, we meet four residents living on the margins, striving to enjoy their golden years. By turns biting, tender, and surreal, the film demonstrates that no matter our age, we are always becoming. With strikingly composed cinematography, SOME KIND OF HEAVEN challenges our stereotypes around aging, emboldening its characters to live as vibrantly as possible in the time they have left.
[In Competition]

SOUTHERN GOTHIC 
directed by Stephen Robert Morse, Nick Hampson
USA, 2020, English, 94 minutes
Set in the heart of the American South, SOUTHERN GOTHIC examines both the 1983 and 2018 investigations into the racially-motivated murder of African-American man Timothy Coggins in Griffin, Georgia. A multi-layered story of one town in two different eras, it highlights how one era enabled this crime to go without punishment and how the other attempts to bring justice decades later. Featuring a 360-degree view of all people involved within the case, SOUTHERN GOTHIC asks audiences to become the juries themselves; questioning their presumptions of guilt, innocence, and authority.
[Georgia Film] [World Premiere]

TRANSHOOD
directed by Sharon Liese
USA, 2020, English, 96 minutes
Filmed over five years in Kansas City, TRANSHOOD follows four transgender kids - beginning at ages 4, 7, 12, and 15 - as they redefine “coming of age.” These trans kids and their families allow us into the intimate realities of how gender is re-shaping the family next door in a never-before-told chronicling of growing up trans in the heartland. The film is a nuanced examination of how families tussle, transform, and sometimes find unexpected purpose in their identities as trans families.
[Pink Peach]

WHAT’S EATING RALPHIE MAY?
directed by Cat Rhinehart
USA, 2019, English, 90 minutes
Filmmaker Cat Rhinehart spends one year closely following comedian Ralphie May, leading up to his planned weight loss surgery. Initially intended to be a weight loss documentary, what is captured instead is a raw and intimate portrait of a family dealing with addiction, a wife coming to terms with her inability to change the person she loves, and a tragically flawed comedian breaking down during one of the last years of his life.

SHORT FILM BLOCKS

CALL YOUR MOM
Candid conversations about the ties that bind.
Documentary Shorts

DÍA DE LA MADRE | directed by Ashley Brandon & Dennis Hohne, USA, 5:36
A band of juveniles embarks on a 24-hour spree of breaking into houses and causing a ruckus.

ÀI BÀBA (LOVE DAD) (愛爸爸) | directed by Connie Huang, USA, 6:13
A film revealing an intimate recording between a mother and her 7 year old daughter talking about divorce.
[New Mavericks]

NO CRYING AT THE DINNER TABLE | directed by Carol Nguyen, Canada, 15:40
Filmmaker Carol Nguyen interviews her family to craft a portrait of love, grief and intergenerational trauma.
[In Competition]

WATER CHILD (MIZUKO) | directed by Kira Dane & Katelyn Rebelo, Japan/USA, 14:45
Inspired by a Buddhist ritual for grieving abortions, a Japanese-American woman reevaluates what it means to end her own pregnancy.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

THE HEART STILL HUMS | directed by Savanah Leaf & Taylor Russell, USA, 28:44
A documentary short, following five women as they fight for their children through the cycle of homelessness, drug addictions and neglect from their own parents. Unique, yet undoubtedly familiar to many; a story on fear, sacrifice and the unconditional love between a mother and her children.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition] [World Premiere]

COMEDIES OF ERRORS
Nobody's perfect, laugh it off!
Comedy Shorts

SIXTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS | directed by Symone Baptiste, USA, 17:12
A struggling black college grad wakes up to find that reparations have finally been paid to descendants of slaves in America. With this new found capital, he must decide how best to spend his newfound money, totaling a mere $16,000.

MONEYBAG HEAD | directed by Patrick O'Brien, USA, 15:20
Dennis is searching for human connection despite having a head that looks like a literal bag of money.

COFFEE SHOP NAMES | directed by Deepak Sethi, USA, 7:58
Three Indian people imagine their personas as their "coffee shop names," the names they give baristas because their real names are hard to pronounce.

DADDIO | directed by Casey Wilson, USA, 17:15
A dad and daughter comedically grapple with grief in different ways – from questionable hair perms and hot tub hangs to sleeping in closets and embracing the extremes of laziness. Unfortunately, based on real life events.
[New Mavericks]

RICHARD NIXON: GETAWAY DRIVER | directed by Kevin Daniel Lonano, USA, 5:47
Drunk on power and tripping on LSD, President Richard Nixon recounts his role as the getaway driver for JFK's second shooter.
[Georgia Film]

UNFINISHED BUSINESS | directed by Mary Dauterman, USA, 6:52
A male stripper has an unusual experience on the job.

THIRSTY | directed by Nicole Delaney, USA, 11:59
A mosquito falls in love with a man after she tastes his blood.

EAT THE RICH
A feast for the eyes served in three courses.
Narrative Shorts

NIMIC | directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, Germany/United Kingdom/USA, 11:35
A professional cellist has an encounter with a stranger on the subway which has unexpected and
far-reaching ramifications on his life.

CHEWING GUM (CHICLETE) | directed by Philippe Noguchi, Brazil, 19:20
Irene is one of the exiles of a fantastic island populated by young people of curious eating habits, whose only connection with the world outside is a boat of supplies. An unexpected event makes her the protagonist of a strange collective catharsis.
[Cinemás] [In Competition]

ELECTRIC SWAN | directed by Konstantina Kotzamani, France, 40:30
Buildings are not supposed to move. But in Buenos Aires, a building sways and the ceiling shivers, causing a strange nausea that devours its residents. Those who live on the top are afraid they'll fall - the ones who live beneath are afraid they'll drown.

EXIT INTERVIEWS
Memoirs of moving on.
Narrative Shorts

HE LEFT INSTRUCTIONS | directed by Zeke Farrow, USA, 13:00
Estranged sisters Christine and Kristin reunite at their brother's apartment after his sudden death. The instructions he left for them will bring them together.

GOODBYE GOLOVIN | directed by Mathieu Grimard, Ukraine/Canada, 14:02
For Ian Golovin, the death of his father is the chance at a new life outside his native country. As he prepares to leave and bid farewell to his sister, he is forced to face his decision — why he is always blindly moving forward and what he is leaving behind.
[In Competition]

DRIFTING (漂流) | directed by Hanxiong Bo, China/USA, 16:25
Yan is an illegal second child born during the One-Child policy. To avoid government punishment, Yan's parents hid their oldest daughter in the countryside and raised Yan as a girl. Now a young adult, Yan struggles with his gender identity and being treated an outcast in a conservative society. His sole escape is drifting his father's old taxi through abandoned parking lots.

SON OF A DANCER ( ابن الرقاصة) | directed by Georges Hazim, Lebanon, 20:49
Grieving the loss of his mother, Majed attempts to reconcile his memory of her with the discovery of her past as a belly dancer.
[Pink Peach]

JARVIK | directed by Emilie Mannering, Canada, 19:29
As the summer is coming to an end, Léa needs to breathe but her brother's mechanical heart constantly reminds her that life hangs by a thread.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

T | directed by Keisha Rae Witherspoon, USA, 13:51
A film crew follows three grieving participants of Miami’s annual T Ball, where folks assemble to model R.I.P. t-shirts and innovative costumes designed in honor of their dead.
[In Competition]

FLASHBULB ROMANCE
Snapshots of lust and longing.
Narrative and Documentary Shorts 

MINI DV | directed by Shauly Melamed, Israel, 9:56
Through self-made video recordings, filmmaker Shauly revisits his childhood cinematic attempts and discovers the recordings he made with friends hid his biggest secret.
[Pink Peach]

GOD | directed by Greg Brunkalla, USA, 13:30
A daydreaming college student’s sexuality comes into question when his fraternity becomes obsessed with a poem and its poetess.

ANNA | directed by Dekel Berenson, Ukraine/United Kingdom/Israel, 15:20
Living in war-torn Eastern Ukraine Anna is an aging single mother who is desperate for a change. Lured by a radio advertisement, she goes to party with a group of American men who are touring the country, searching for love.

DICK PICS! (A DOCUMENTARY) | directed by Hannah McSwiggen & Russell Sheaffer, USA, 12:18
Dick Pics! gathers men from all walks of life and asks them one of the most important questions of the modern era: “What in god’s name compels you to send pictures of your penis to non-consenting others?”

DIRTY | directed by Matthew Puccini, USA, 10:50
Marco cuts class to spend the afternoon with his boyfriend. Things do not go as planned.
[Pink Peach]

BKS | directed by Alexa-Jeanne Dubé, Canada, 10:37
The portrait of a breakup told through ASMR.
[New Mavericks]

FOUR OF A KIND
A cinematic balm for the soul.
Documentary Shorts

AFTER THE SILENCE (APRÈS LE SILENCE) | directed by Sonam Larcin, Belgium, 23:20
In order to flee his country, David had to leave behind the man that he loves. Now seeking refugee status, David must speak for the first time about a life he was forced to keep hidden.
[Pink Peach] [In Competition]

19.91 | directed by Emilia Sniegoska, Poland, 24:25
A meaningful friendship blossoms between a 19 year old German girl and a 91 year old Polish Holocaust survivor.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

ALL CATS ARE GREY IN THE DARK (NACHTS SIND ALLE KATZEN GRAU) | directed by Lasse Linder, Switzerland, 18:16
Christian lives with his two cats Marmelade and Katjuscha. As he is yearning to become a father, he decides to fertilize his beloved cat Marmelade by an exquisite tomcat from abroad.
[In Competition]

COBY AND STEPHEN ARE IN LOVE | directed by Carlo Nasisse & Luka Yuanyuan Yang, USA/China, 30:41
Coby, a 92 year old retired nightclub dancer, and Stephen, a filmmaker 20 years her junior, have found an unlikely love in each other through matching outfits, dance, and art. As their last dance performance in Las Vegas approaches, Coby and Stephen prepare a final routine.
[In Competition]

LATE NIGHT, GREAT NIGHT
Sleep is for the weak.
Narrative and Animated Shorts

BENEVOLENT BA | directed by Diffan Sina Norman, Malaysia/USA, 9:00
A devout woman’s lust for virtue thrusts her family into a sacrificial slaughter of biblical proportions.

VALERIO’S DAY OUT | directed by Michael Arcos, USA, 8:30
A young jaguar goes on a killing spree when he escapes from his enclosure at a zoo. After he's captured, sedated, and relocated, he makes a video diary for his significant other, Lula.

STUCCO | directed by Janina Gavankar & Russo Schelling, USA, 17:28
An agoraphobic woman finds a suspicious, hollow wall in her house.

TERROR FERVOR | directed by Phoebe Parsons, Canada, 6:00
The vices of seven characters take the viewer on a psychedelic fever dream that is hard to classify and hard to forget.

TIC | directed by Ben Nicholas, Canada, 15:09
Alan is an online shopping addict and devoted product reviewer. He also happens to be a murderer. He leaves some killer reviews.

HAND IN HAND | directed by Ennio Ruschetti, Switzerland, 3:41
Two Politicians shake hands. The situation gets out of hand.

CHANGELING | directed by Faye Jackson, United Kingdom, 9:30
A new mother becomes increasingly mesmerised and appalled by the strange transformations happening around her baby. She instinctively hides them, unaware they are building towards a final metamorphosis - her own.
[New Mavericks]

NOW THAT’S WHAT I CALL KID SHORTS
Fun-sized films for the young and young at heart.
Kids Shorts

RUNAWAY RADISH | directed by Grace Hayes-Dineen, USA, 3:16
A Daikon radish comes to life one day and is chased through the farmer's market, causing chaos.
[Georgia Film]

THE KITE | directed by Martin Smatana, Czech Republic/Slovakia/Poland, 13:03
The friendship of a little boy and his grandpa extends far into the sky above their flying kite.
[In Competition]

ARCHIE | directed by Ainslie Henderson, United Kingdom, 4:24
A new day brings sunshine and hope for Archie who goes on a journey to the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

MASTER MOLEY BY ROYAL INVITATION | directed by Leon Joosen, United Kingdom, 33:09
The story of a young Mole and his adventure to pick a rose from the Queen's Garden, not knowing that this simple act will change, not only his life, but the life of all Moles.

OUTSIDE THE LINES
Technicolor trips beyond the boundaries of convention.
Animated Shorts

FOREIGN EXCHANGE | directed by Corrie Francis Parks, USA, 5:45
A multitude of mini-universes collide in this tiny world built with money and sand.
[In Competition]

KAPAEMAHU | directed by Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Dean Hamer, & Joe Wilson, USA, 8:28
The hidden history of four mysterious boulders on Waikiki Beach—and the mystical transgender healing spirits within them.
[Pink Peach] [In Competition]

UMBILICAL | directed by Danski Tang, China/USA, 6:53
An animated documentary exploring how a mother’s abusive relationship shaped the filmmaker's experiences in boarding school.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

PURPLEBOY | directed by Alexandre Siqueira, Portugal/France/Belgium, 13:55
Oscar is a child who sprouts in his parents garden. Nobody knows his biological sex but he claims the masculine gender. Will he manage to have the identity recognition he desires?
[Pink Peach]

HI, CROWS | directed by Zehong Zhu, United Kingdom, 4:51
A girl performs in front of a group of crows. She thinks she needs to make her audience happy, but is faced with self-doubt.
[New Mavericks]

INTERMISSION EXPEDITION | directed by Wiep Teeuwisse, The Netherlands, 8:21
During a sunny holiday, a flock of tourists struggle to let go of their busy city lives. The absence of daily tasks leaves them lost in an uncomfortable and frightening place.

2.3 X 2.6 X 3.2 | directed by Jiaqi Wang, United Kingdom, 3:47
A filmmaker discusses the certainty of hope and uncertainty of disease through a Kareau, a wooden figure meant to drive away the bad spirits.
[New Mavericks]

GRAY BODY (جسم خاکستری) | directed by Samaneh Shojaei, Iran, 4:59
Waiting for their appointments, the patients are far less calm than the doctor.

INTO THE FLAME | directed by Sean McClintock, USA, 5:51
As Floyd tries to process the disappearance of his cult-obsessed wife, a moth burrows his way into his ear, setting off a series of visions and ultimately, the adventure of his life.

CLOSE(D) | directed by Elaine Song, United Kingdom, 3:49
After finding her favorite restaurant has closed, a girl realizes the special connection she had with the place and its food.
[New Mavericks]

SH_T HAPPENS | directed by Michaela Mihalyi & David Stumpf, Czech Republic/Slovakia/France, 13:10
Mutual despair leads an exhausted caretaker, his frustrated wife, and a totally depressed deer to absurd events, because... shit happens all the time.
[In Competition]

OUTTA THIS WORLD
Earthly tensions heightened by the supernatural.
Sci-Fi and Fantasy Shorts

THE PREGNANT GROUND | directed by Haolu Wang, United Kingdom, 24:02
After a traumatic stillbirth, a woman starts to believe the ground below her apartment is pregnant.
[New Mavericks]

ABDUCTION | directed by Paul Komadina, Australia, 16:00
After waking up in a field with no memory of how she got there, Mathilda reckons strange visions and marks on her body with the trail of judgement and cruelty that follows.
[World Premiere]

THE TAIL (KUYRUK) | directed by Yiğit Hepsev, Turkey, 10:03
After an existential encounter with his neighbor, Ekrem rethinks his morning routine – cutting off the second head which grows from his neck every night.

WHITE ECHO | directed by Chloe Sevigny, USA, 14:01
After participating in a game of Ouija with a group of friends, Carla is confronted by the supernatural powers she only used to claim to possess.
[New Mavericks]

SWEEP AWAY HUNGRY GHOSTS | directed by Zhang and Knight, United Kingdom, 8:19
The wishful reverie of a young Asian man as he struggles to come to terms with his deceased father’s gender identity. Imbued with themes of traditional Chinese filial piety, the film explores the shifting role of the parent and the uncomfortable space between sex and gender.
[Pink Peach]

ARABIAN ALIEN | directed by Meshal Aljaser, USA, 14:59
Saad, a married Muslim man facing an identity crisis, finds a way to cope with his depression after a space Alien is introduced into his life.
[Pink Peach] [In Competition]

POWER MOVES
Women making their own ways.
New Mavericks Shorts

BLOCKS | directed by Bridget Moloney, USA, 11:04
An existential comedy about the mother of two young children who begins to spontaneously vomit plastic toy blocks.
[New Mavericks]

THE WALKING FISH | directed by Thessa Meijer, Japan/The Netherlands, 18:59
A sea-creature transforms into a human girl. Her sole desire is to become a perfect individual, but she finds herself overwhelmed with her ambitious pursuits. Will she ever be content?
[New Mavericks]

MARCY LEARNS SOMETHING NEW | directed by Julia Kennelly, USA, 15:52
Feeling run down by the usual cycle of self-improvement programs, a widow tries going to a dominatrix workshop.
[New Mavericks]

BLACKHEADS | directed by Emily Ann Hoffman, USA, 7:46
A woman copes with bad therapy, heartbreak, and blackheads.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

SUZE | directed by Korlei Rochat, Switzerland, 19:30
In a fury of violence, Suze meets the man of her dreams. After a passionate night together, Suze will find out she is allergic to her new friend.
[New Mavericks] [In Competition]

RADICAL REVERIES
A transcendental medley of exceptional cinematic psalms.
Experimental Shorts

UNREST IN IRAN | directed by Alexandra Tahereh Kaucher, USA/Iran, 4:47
A stream-punk collage film examining the state of Iran and U.S. involvement in Iranian history.

MY MOTHER RESENTS ME | directed by Victoria Linares Villegas, Dominican Republic, 6:44
Victoria, an only daughter, tries to decipher her mother's resentment towards her by parsing through old photographs and new footage.
[New Mavericks] [Pink Peach] [Cinemás]

HIS EYES BEHIND MINE | directed by Qin Ziwei, USA, 5:45
A boy, lost in his insecurity and loneliness, has his first romantic exchange with a stranger through text. The unfamiliar feeling for the man turns into a selfish kind of love. Yet he is unaware of the retaliation coming after him.
[Pink Peach]

CHOR(E)S | directed by Danielle Deadwyler, USA, 12:58
With a Bankhead bounce as clarion call, a single woman choir(us) labors a cacophony of chor(e)s: from the domestic to the limits of being left 'lone.
[Georgia]

TO ALL THOSE | directed by Josh Weissbach, USA, 6:47
A city symphony in miniature, dedicated to anyone who has gotten lost in thought while stuck on the midwinter train- to all that unfolds in those private reveries.

BE KIND, PLEASE | directed by Ace McColl, USA, 3:30
An intimate look into a daughter's relationship with her father, told through compiled voicemails and damaged analog tapes.
[Georgia] [New Mavericks] [World Premiere]

SONG OF CLOUDS | directed by Ankit Poudel, USA, 14:59
A haunting visual fever dream; a meditation on the afterlife; the journey to the other-world and what gets left behind among the living.

OH MY HOMELAND | directed by Stephanie Barber, USA, 3:50
A minimal gesture akin to the practice every portrait painter or mother recognizes as ineffably powerful. A film about identity, love, power, patriotism and the transcendent potential of art through the viewing of a face receiving adoration.
[New Mavericks]

STOMPING GROUND
Georgia makers leaving their marks.
Georgia Shorts

MAKING SAMANTHA | directed by T Cooper & Allison Glock-Cooper, USA, 10:23
This combined documentary and music video shows the bringing together of 27 trans actors to tell the story of one trans woman and what it means to love and be loved.
[Pink Peach] [Georgia Film] [World Premiere]

PETTING ZOO | directed by Daniel Robin, USA, 11:03
In 1974, the local TV news station came into the filmmaker’s childhood home to document and learn about Jewish rituals. A narrative evolves about the formation of American Jewish identity, and transforms into an analogy for the current rise in anti-Semitism and nationalism in America and the world.
[Georgia Film]

AROUND THE BLOCK | directed by Kevon Pryce, USA, 15:08
An ambitious teenage boy is awarded the opportunity to get out of the Bronx, but finds that the city won’t allow him to leave.
[Georgia Film] [World Premiere]

BLISS IS ORANGE | directed by Jenna Kanell, USA, 6:10
When the chip implanted in her wrist lights up green, Claire discovers that someone nearby is the love of her life.
[New Mavericks] [Georgia Film] [World Premiere]

CON FUERZA | directed by Andrés Eduardo, USA, 9:00
A young Venezuelan refugee woman living in Colombia struggles through the pain of leaving home with the help of some local folk characters.
[Cinemas] [Georgia Film]

BROWN WITH BLUE | directed by Christian Nolan Jones, USA, 22:00
The relationship between a young man and woman slowly deteriorates as they struggle to come to grips with a past decision.
[Georgia Film] [World Premiere]

I DO NOT SLEEP | directed by Beppy Gietema, USA, 16:08
After her mother waits too long to bury her brother, Kitty must decide whether to honor the living or the dead.
[New Mavericks] [Georgia Film]

THREE MEN NAMED MANTAS | directed by James Mackenzie, Lithuania/USA, 11:04
After a one night stand, a pregnant American attempts to track down the father of her child in Lithuania.
[Georgia Film] [World Premiere]

WHAT’S UP WITH THE YOUTH?
Up and coming of age.
Narrative Shorts

PAPERBOY (BLAÐBERINN) | directed by Ninna Pálmadóttir, Iceland/USA, 10:25
A small town paper delivery boy peeks through his neighbor’s window and connects with a traumatized woman.
[In Competition]

BYE BYE, BODY | directed by Charlotte Benbeniste, USA, 9:53
When Nina fails to meet her goal in the final week of weight loss camp, she makes a deal with the devil that leads her to see her body anew.
[New Mavericks]

FISH HEAD | directed by Grace Tan, Australia, 10:00
An alienated teen on the cusp of womanhood must find solace in an alternate coming of age, where lines of gender dissolve by the surrounds of the sea.
[Pink Peach] [World Premiere]

HOMEGOING | directed by Carlton Daniel Jr., USA, 13:30
Working as a mortician as his father's funeral parlor, Junior cycles through an unsatisfying daily routine. A night out with friends forces him to see the world as it truly is.

BROKEN BIRD | directed by Rachel Harrison Gordon, USA, 9:58
A biracial girl caught between two worlds prepares for her Bat Mitzvah and adulthood.
[New Mavericks]

LONELY BLUE NIGHT | directed by Johnson Cheng, USA, 15:05
An awkward family reunion at a business dinner leads a Chinese mother to realize the consequences of leaving her daughter in the care of an American homestay family.
[In Competition] [World Premiere]

CREATIVE MEDIA

EPISODIC
Sit back and enjoy our primetime hour on life, love and pursuit of glory.

BROTHERS FROM THE SUBURBS | directed by Patrick Wimp, USA, 14:35
The highs and lows of three black teenagers coming of age in an affluent, suburban, white, private school community.
SHORT TERM RENTAL | directed by Steve Figueiredo & Sean Patrick Kelly, USA, 5:01

After his marriage comes to an abrupt end, John is left with a vacancy in his heart...and his apartment.

PRETTY PEOPLE | directed by Shelby Blake Bartelstein, USA, 10:10
When Rachel's casual and unexpected hook-up sparks Greg's feelings of jealousy, they'll be forced to say what's on their minds.
[New Mavericks]

TOUGH LOVE | directed by James Mackenzie, USA, 13:05
Nikki is committed to finding a unicorn: someone – male, female, non-binary – who she’s madly attracted to, understands her approach to sexuality, and is actually a good person.
[Pink Peach] [Georgia]

BEST SELLER | directed by Nora Kirkpatrick, USA, 14:06
When the reigning queen of the Home Shopping Network is killed live on-the-air during a hair drying demonstration gone wrong, her three venomous, power-hungry disciples enter into a cutthroat competition for her coveted time slot.
[New Mavericks]

MUSIC VIDEOS

Slide into our slate of electrifying cinematic musical melodies.

BUT FIRST… | directed by Erin Brown Thomas, USA, 5:24
When what comes first makes all the difference!
[New Mavericks]

FLOTUS | directed by Sigin Ojulu, USA, 5:39
Three AfroFuturistic aliens crash ship onto an unknown planet Earth. Melanin ensues. Michelle Obama is channeled. And bad-ass, big clit energy is given.
[New Mavericks] [World Premiere]

DON BROCO - ACTION | directed by Benjamin Roberds, USA, 5:57
This live action/stop motion hybrid starts off as a cheesy homage to 80s and 90s TV ads but soon turns into a nightmare world where the toys fight back.
[Georgia]

FINN ANDREWS - ONE BY THE VENOM | directed by Alexander Gandar, New Zealand, 2:49
A strange and sprawling mosaic about the ways one might end up meeting one's maker.

LADY CLEMENTINE’S FANTASTIC PARTY - CLEMENTINE SEASON X EAST COAST | directed by Mikkoh, USA, 4:43
Lady Clementine brings us the spring dream we’ve all been thirsting for; a window into her dreamworld in “Clementine Season" and a window into her reality in “East Coast.”
[New Mavericks] [Georgia] [Pink Peach]

THE FINAL PIECE | directed by Maris Jones, USA, 3:48
Music artist Suzy Jones is submerged into a visual collage paying homage to 60s art.
[New Mavericks] [Georgia]

TERRY! | directed by Andrew Schwab, USA, 3:03
Utilizing puppetry, choreography, and psychedelic imagery, Atlanta band Moloq celebrates the national treasure that is Terry Gross.
[Georgia]

VIOLENT WATER | directed by Danny Chandia, USA, 4:09
The handcrafted story of a French Navy captain who discovers a wondrous underwater city, and the mermaid who must rescue him from the danger that awaits.

DUE WEST | directed by Cara Stricker & Mindy Le Brock, USA, 5:26
A continuation of the evolution of self, questioning of the romanticism of “home” and what we leave behind in order to gain hope in what’s ahead.
[New Mavericks]

MORMOR - SOMEPLACE ELSE | directed by rubberband, USA, 3:50
A man chases himself after a fatal accident.

J.I.D. - OFF DA ZOINKYS | directed by Scott Lazer, USA, 2:54
In a reimagined scene from Robert Altman's classic 1973 film ‘The Long Goodbye', Ansel Elgort stars as a hungover man that feeds his cat.
[Georgia]

VIRTUOUS CIRCLE | directed by Farhad Ghaderi, Canada, 5:10
The joys and pains of brotherhood through the volatile relationship between a young boy and his self-destructive older brother.

VAGABON - WATER ME DOWN | directed by Maegan Houang, USA, 4:32

Laetitia Tamko meditates on self-empowerment through movement and colored dreamscapes.
[New Mavericks]

VIRTUAL REALITY

Immerse yourself in our line-up of ground-breaking 360° experiences.

12 SECONDS OF GUNFIRE | directed by Seth Blanchard & Suzette Moyer, USA, 7:26
First-grader Ava struggles to deal with the aftermath of a school shooting — from her friend Jacob’s funeral to the anguished letter she sends to President Donald Trump asking him to keep kids safe from guns.

HOW TO TELL A TRUE IMMIGRANT STORY | directed by Aggie Ebrahimi Bazaz, USA, 12:57
A 360-degree tapestry of reflections on belonging, racial profiling, and resilience among members of an immigrant community in upstate New York.
[Georgia] [New Mavericks]

CHILDREN DO NOT PLAY WAR | directed by Fabiano Mixo, USA/Brazil/Uganda, 8:02
A tale of the war in Uganda told through the eyes of a young girl. Mixing early oral storytelling tradition and contemporary VR narrative, blending fiction and non-fiction elements, this film narrates the memories, dreams and daily lives of the children who returned from the war and about how they recovered their childhood.

SWAMPSCAPES | directed by Liz Miller, Kim Grinfeder, & Juan Carlos Zaldivar, USA, 12:47
An immersive film that offers a journey to remote regions of the Everglades, one of the most diverse swamps in the world, and explores the complexity between humans and this extraordinary ecosystem.

TX-REVERSE 360° | directed by Martin Reinhart & Virgil Widrich, Austria/Germany, 5:28
What is behind the cinema screen? What if the auditorium dissolves and with it the familiar laws of cinema itself? An experience shot in 10K and 360° with 135 participants at Babylon Berlin, reversing time and space.

VR FREE | directed by Milad Tangshir, Italy, 10:08
Exploring the nature of incarceration spaces by portraying slices of life inside a prison in Turin, Italy. VR bridges the gap between the jail and the world outside: virtual fragments of freedom regained.

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Atlanta Film Festival Postpones 2020 Event

ATLANTA, GA (March 19, 2020) - In light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we have made the difficult decision to postpone the 44th annual Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), originally slated for April 30 – May 10, 2020.

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STATEMENT FROM EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR CHRISTOPHER ESCOBAR

ATLANTA, GA (March 19, 2020) - In light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we have made the difficult decision to postpone the 44th annual Atlanta Film Festival + Creative Conference (ATLFF), originally slated for April 30 – May 10, 2020. We remain committed to presenting ATLFF in 2020 in a way that the city can be proud of, and recognize that with recent guidelines by both the City of Atlanta and the CDC, it is no longer possible on the previously announced dates. We are already in the process of selecting new dates for later in the year, which we hope to announce very soon.

This is not a decision we make lightly, but we are committed to protecting the safety of our staff, filmmakers and all those who attend our event. We also recognize the importance of playing our part to slow the effects of COVID-19 in order to keep those among us who are most vulnerable safe. 

We are incredibly proud of the work we will showcase in our 2020 program, and remain committed to bringing a diverse lineup of selected films and creative works, in addition to our Creative Conference and special events, to audiences at a time that it is safe to do so. The lineup of programming, selected from a record-breaking 8,550 submissions, has been chosen and will be announced with the forthcoming revised dates for the 2020 event. 

Film festivals have always been deeply rooted in community. While the upheaval in the festival landscape is unprecedented and can feel disheartening, we are encouraged by the level of kindness and support we have witnessed amongst our festival peers, sponsors, the filmmaking community and the city of Atlanta. With this support and collaboration, ATLFF and its parent organization, the Atlanta Film Society (ATLFS), remain committed to our mission to provide support, education and a voice for the arts and filmmakers across the globe, and especially in the state of Georgia. 

ATLFS will continue to explore online options for classes and events as needed over the coming months, following the guidelines of the CDC and local officials as we move forward.

We realize that moving our dates may bring about scheduling conflicts with our attendees. Any purchased badges will be honored for the new dates. In the event you can no longer attend the festival and have already purchased badges for the original dates, we have relaxed our refund policy and will provide a window to request refunds. Please refer to our website and FAQ page for details on refunds—these pages will be updated as soon as our new dates are announced.

To stay up-to-date on new festival dates, announcements on the lineup and other Atlanta Film Festival news, please visit AtlantaFilmFestival.com and follow the festival on social media via Facebook (@atlantafilmfestival), Twitter (@atlantafilmfest) and Instagram (@atlantafilmfestival).

About the Atlanta Film Festival and Atlanta Film Society 
The Atlanta Film Festival, now in its fifth decade, is an Academy Award-qualifying festival and one of the region’s largest and longest-running preeminent celebrations of cinema in the Southeast United States. More than 30,000 festival attendees enjoy independent, animated, documentary and short films each year, selected from more than 8,550 submissions from 118 countries. The Atlanta Film Festival is the chief annual operation of the Atlanta Film Society (ATLFS), one of the oldest and largest organizations dedicated to the promotion and education of film in the United States, which enriches the community through screenings, classes, workshops and other events year-round. It is also the most distinguished event in its class, recognized on USA Today’s ‘10Best Film Festivals’, as well as the 'Best Spring Festival' by Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 'Best Film Festival' by Creative Loafing and Atlanta Magazine, and one of the '25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World' by MovieMaker Magazine. Major funding for the Atlanta Film Society is provided by WarnerMedia, SPANX and the Sara Blakely Foundation, the Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs, the Fulton County Board of Commissioners through the Fulton County Arts & Culture Department and the National Endowment for the Arts through the Art Works category and Delta Airlines.

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2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition Finalists

The Atlanta Film Festival is honored to announce the Finalists in the 2020 Screenplay Competition. Chosen from just shy of 1,300 submissions, these screenplays represent those moving forward from our feature film, television pilot, and short film categories.

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The Atlanta Film Festival is honored to announce the Finalists in the 2020 Screenplay Competition. Chosen from just shy of 1,300 submissions, these screenplays represent those moving forward from our feature film, television pilot, and short film categories.

These aspiring authors are competing for once in a lifetime mentorship opportunities to help hone their screenplays and plan the next steps in their careers. Wish these talented screenwriters well as our programming team takes on the incredibly difficult task of choosing this year’s winners!

Feature Screenplay Finalists

Back To Me — Ora Yashar

Battle Cries — Karen Walker

I.R.L. In Real Life — Justin Shelton

Mother-Daughter — Tricia Lee

My Brother's Keeper — Josh Schorr

Project Fog — Adva Reichman

The Rat and the Bluebird — T.E. Strong

Shepherd One — Cameron Young

The Shtick-up — Val Bodurtha

Surgeon Hong — Paul Gross

Pilot Screenplay Finalists

Birdsong — Jennifer Dunn

Eterna — Scott Simonsen

Kindly Metal Mother — Kurtis Theorin

Pangea — T. C. Smith

re.Form(ed) — Johnny Gilligan

Red Flag — Suzanne Slack-Smith

Westphall — Keith St. Lawrence

Short Screenplay Finalists

All You Want to Know — Laurel Kulow

Conscience — Brandon Kelley

The Cricket — Gabe Berry

Dunked — John Bickerstaff

Haint — Gabriela McNicoll

Laika — Kate Balsley

Pigskin — Susan Polk

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2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition Semifinalists

The Atlanta Film Festival is proud to announce the Semifinalists in the 2020 Screenplay Competition. Chosen from just shy of 1,300 submissions, these screenplays represent the top 10% of all entries, moving forward in our feature film, television pilot, and short film categories.

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The Atlanta Film Festival is proud to announce the Semifinalists in the 2020 Screenplay Competition. Chosen from just shy of 1,300 submissions, these screenplays represent the top 10% of all entries, moving forward in our feature film, television pilot, and short film categories.

These gifted screenwriters are competing for once in a lifetime mentorship opportunities to help hone their screenplays and plan the next steps in their careers.

Congratulations to these amazing authors, and wish them well as our programming team narrows this list down to finalists and then this year’s winners!

Feature Screenplay Semifinalists

Akashi-あかし  — Mayumi Yoshida

Ana  — Jacob Cullen

Anya's Eye  — Carlton Proctor

Art Appreciation  — Jennifer Titus & Mark Provencher

Back to Me   — Ora Yashar

Battle Cries  — Karen Walker

The Beautiful Dark  — Erik Gernand

BIN  — Asad Farooqui

Borderline  — Joe Bonito

Breast is Best  — Erika Robel

A Brown Coat  — Rochelle Potkar

Burning in Water   — Caleb Samples

The Company We Keep  — Suhashini Krishnan

Conscious Recoupling  — Josh Jacobs

The Dark Cookie  — James Thomas Gilbert

The Duchess of Criminality  — Timothy Cheyefsky

Foxed  — James Stewart

Fracture  — Eliot Routh

The Gateway Drug  — Ana Worrel & Amy Frances Wright

The Ghosts of Le Griffon  — Nicole Ramberg

Goat Island  — Nathan Cabaniss

Got Your Back  — Katy Dore

The Heeler  — Darcy Lueking Bahensky

Henrietta  — Harry Aspinwall

I.R.L. In Real Life  — Justin Shelton

In Too Deep: The Brian Futz Story (A Long Lost 80's Movie)  — Zack R. Smith & Andrew Miller

Incarnations  — Albert M. Chan

Know Your Body  — Ariella Carmell

The Lease of Nature  — Anderson Boyd

Mayfair  — Patrick John Ford

Mine  — Blaire Baron & Scott Fifer

Mint  — Drew Guajardo

Monster(s)  — Aidan Largey

Mother-Daughter  — Tricia Lee

My Brother's Keeper  — Joshua Schorr

My Father's Murders  — Michael Salomon

Northridge  — Patrick Pfupajena

Not Half Anything  — David Gray

Old Dad  — Jim Harkins

Old Dogs and Still Waters  — Avi Glick

On the Black  — Kristen Mack Klebenow

The Oughthousers  — Ari Krause

Over Here  — Glen Craney

Pandemonium  — Michael Douglas

Pastor Dash  — Pearse Lehane

Pick Up Sidney  — Natalie Higdon

The Pinch  — James Raynor

Project Fog  — Adva Reichman

The Rat and the Bluebird  — T.E. Strong

Retreat  — Jono Mitchell, Alexander Baxter, & Madison Hatfield

The Rites of Salem  — Michael McCoy

A Seeping Wound  — Darryl Wimberley

Shepherd One  — Cameron Young

The Shtick-up  — Val Bodurtha

Skepticon  — Cameron Young

Skin Deep  — Cierra Lockett

The Sons of May  — Donna McNeely Burke

Spindle City  — Daniel Earney

Surgeon Hong  — Paul Gross

They Went On  — Anthony Gilmore & Drew McCoy

A Town Called Nowhere  — Peter Mahaffey

The Waiting Room  — Alex May

Walks the Buffalo  — Larry M. Baer

Where Teardrops Fall  — Jesse Mays Robinson

Zero Legacy  — Izzy and Vic Vic Vaughan

Pilot Screenplay Semifinalists

Apache  — Cameron Barsanti

As American as Fortune Cookies  — Hua Shang

Barrio - El Niño  — Charlie Gandez

Bea Rose  — Natalia Temesgen

Birdsong  — Jennifer Dunn

The Breaching  — Wendy Young

Carpetbaggers  — Matt Thomas

Chloe Bowe  — Craig Reynolds

Conundrum Integrated  — Micah Paisner

Division 34  — Eyas Shanaah

Double Dads  — Jessica Burnett

Eterna  — Scott Simonsen

Faith Breaker  — Sam Alper

Futurelink  — Jason Gilmore

In the Gutter  — Christine Burright McGuigan

Jersey Rican  — Ashlei Hardenburg

Kindly Metal Mother  — Kurtis Theorin

La Madrina  — Adam Santa María

Laughing to Keep from Crying  — Jane Barr

The Line  — Jeff Bower

Lost in the Flood  — Sean Collins-Smith

On the Verge  — Yair Karlberger

The Paisley Witch Trial  — Julia Campanelli

Pangea  — T. C. Smith

Pony Up  — Caroline Mungo

Pound Foolish  — Susan Feingold

Pure  — Erika Hakmiller

re.Form(ed)  — Johnny Gilligan

Red Flag  — Suzanne Slack-Smith

The Sensualist  — Suzanne Griffin

Stayers  — Teddy Gilmore & Mat Dann

That Sister Thang  — Lindiwe Mueller-Westernhagen & Dale Winton

The Unvarnished Tales of the Green Fairy  — Jacob Cullen

A Version  — Asad Farooqui

Westphall  — Keith St. Lawrence

Short Screenplay Semifinalists

All You Want to Know  — Laurel Kulow

Business of Ferrets  — Will Berry

Chemo  — Marcus Julius

The Chocolate Kandinsky  — Suzanne Griffin

Conscience  — Brandon Kelley

The Cricket  — Gabe Berry

Deadsitting  — Gabriel Meyers

Definitely Not a Monster  — Brea Angelo

Divinity  — Nelson Downend

Downballot  — John Goshorn

Dreamcatcher  — Shaun Radecki

Dunked  — John Bickerstaff

Evelyn in 7  — Kasia Kowalczyk

Everyday  — Ryan Dellaquila

Fantasy Chat  — Mindy Fay Parks

Genie  — Paul Frank

Greg the Puddle  — Shaun Radecki

Haint  — Gabriela McNicoll

Hawk Bells  — Kristian Mercado

I-106  — Luis Bou

Kid Midnight  — Mychal Sargent

Laika  — Kate Balsley

Man of Style  — Deirdre Brenner

Pigskin  — Susan Polk

Possum  — Lyndal Simpson

Quarry  — Nell Ovitt

Say Yes  — Gabe Berry

Squished  — Shaun Radecki

Until the Last One Falls  — Gabe Berry

Youth in a Casket  — Hannah Aslesen

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2020 Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition Quarterfinalists

The Atlanta Film Festival is proud to announce the quarterfinalists in the 2020 Screenplay Competition. Chosen from nearly 1,300 submissions, these screenplays represent those moving forward from our feature film, television pilot, and short film categories. Our writers are competing for once in a lifetime mentorship opportunities to help hone their craft and plan the next steps in their careers.

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The Atlanta Film Festival is proud to announce the quarterfinalists in the 2020 Screenplay Competition. Chosen from nearly 1,300 submissions, these screenplays represent those moving forward from our feature film, television pilot, and short film categories. Our writers are competing for once in a lifetime mentorship opportunities to help hone their craft and plan the next steps in their careers. 

Congratulations to all the authors so far. Stay tuned as our programming team narrows this list down to semifinalists, finalists, and this year’s winners!

Feature Screenplay Quarterfinalists

Akashi-あかし — Mayumi Yoshida

Ana — Jacob Cullen

Ann's Secret — Nadira "Naz" Pankey

Anya's Eye — Carlton Proctor

Art Appreciation — Jennifer Titus & Mark Provencher

Back to Me  — Ora Yashar

Bad Romance — Thada Catalon

Battle Cries — Karen Walker

The Beautiful Dark — Erik Gernand

Bedford Falls — Dashiell Finley (story by Dashiell Finley and Adam Dicterow)

BIN — Asad Farooqui

Bingo Night from Hell — David Piechowski

Blinker — Matthew Emery

Blue Comedy — Vincent Accettola

Borderline — Joe Bonito

Boundaries — Asad Farooqui

Breast is Best — Erika Robel

A Brown Coat — Rochelle Potkar

Burning in Water  — Caleb Samples

Captain C! — John Paul Su

The City of Gale — Taylor Rankin

Claudia Decoded — Jeff Baker & Ryan Proffitt

CNTRL+P — Albert Letizia

The Company We Keep — Suhashini Krishnan

Compositions for the Young and Old — Michael Warmoth & Riley Warmoth

Conscious Recoupling — Josh Jacobs

The Dark Cookie — James Thomas Gilbert

Dog#9 — Lee Lawson

Drawing Dead — Quentin Ellis

The Duchess of Criminality — Timothy Cheyefsky

Electronic Sounds from a Still Heart — Finley Mulligan

Faster than Bullets — Pat Holden

Fire on the Mountain — Brady Brown

Foxed — James Stewart

Fracture — Eliot Routh

Fukushima, Arkansas — Nathan Patton

The Gateway Drug — Ana Worrel & Amy Frances Wright

The Ghosts of Le Griffon — Nicole Ramberg

Goat Island — Nathan Cabaniss

Godless Skies — Joshua David Harris

Got Your Back — Katy Dore

The Hammer — Jason Hunter

Hannibal, Missouri — Peter Buhl & Conor O'Farrell

The Heeler — Darcy Lueking Bahensky

The Hemingway Mystique — Christine Sneed

Henrietta — Harry Aspinwall

Hero of the Good Land — Logan Shaw

Hills of Gold — Lia Wang

I.R.L. In Real Life — Justin Shelton

Immortal — Robert Allaire & Natalie Metzger

The Impresario — Daniel Leventhal

In Nomine Dei — John Iadarola

In Too Deep: The Brian Futz Story (A Long Lost 80's Movie) — Zack R. Smith & Andrew Miller

Incarnations — Albert M. Chan

The Italian Lover — Suzanne Griffin

Italians Without a Cause — Lucia Braccalenti

Jocko — Derek Vitatoe

Karma — Tiffany Barker

The Keeper — Kevin Nelson

Know Your Body — Ariella Carmell

The Lease of Nature — Anderson Boyd

Lest We Forget — Laura Hamlet

The Light that Burns in Us — Claire Hampsey

The Limo Driver — Tejal Desai

Mad Rush — Manfred Lopez Grem (story by Christine Burright McGuigan & Manfred Lopez Grem)

Mayfair — Patrick John Ford

Men in the Water — Kathleen Caslin

Mine — Blaire Baron & Scott Fifer

Mint — Drew Guajardo

Monster(s) — Aidan Largey

Mother-Daughter — Tricia Lee

The Murder of Stanford White — Bartle Bull

My Brother's Keeper — Joshua Schorr

My Father's Murders — Michael Salomon

My Name Is Martin — Michael J. Hardy & Kenddrie Utuk

The Mystery Knight — Abril Carpio Marion

The Nerve to Try — Kima Brown

New York Scout Story  — Erick Freitas

Northridge — Patrick Pfupajena

Not Half Anything — David Gray

Of Saints & Scholars — Amy Allen

Old Dad — Jim Harkins

Old Dogs and Still Waters — Avi Glick

On the Black — Kristen Mack Klebenow

Orwell's War — Lawrence Bogad

The Oughthousers — Ari Krause

Our Prestigious Faculty — Rani Deighe Crowe

Over Here — Glen Craney

Pandemonium — Michael Douglas

Pastor Dash — Pearse Lehane

The Persistence of Memory — Jas Shenstone

Pick — Bernhard Riedhammer

Pick Up Sidney — Natalie Higdon

The Pinch — James Raynor

Please, Anybody, But Not a Millionaire! — Larisa Vödisch-Nikitina

Project Fog — Adva Reichman

The Rat and the Bluebird — T.E. Strong

The Raving — Karl Gerhardt

Recoil — Robert Armanyous

The Reflection of a Tragic Lullaby  — James Kirk

Retreat — Jono Mitchell, Alexander Baxter, & Madison Hatfield

The Rites of Salem — Michael McCoy

Rodolfo and Julienne — Mary Albanese

Second Summer of Love — Sherrelle Kirkland-Andrews

A Seeping Wound — Darryl Wimberley

Seraphim's Miracle — Jeremy Storey

Shepherd One — Cameron Young

Shores of a New Blood — Mark Schmitz

The Shtick-up — Val Bodurtha

Sint Holo — Michael Vincent Montgomery

Skepticon — Cameron Young

Skin Deep — Cierra Lockett

The Sons of May — Donna McNeely Burke

Spindle City — Daniel Earney

Surgeon Hong — Paul Gross

The Suspect is a Black Male — Alvoro Leite

They Went On — Anthony Gilmore & Drew McCoy

Tilt — Pearse Lehane

Torched — Dianna Zimmerman

A Town Called Nowhere — Peter Mahaffey

Under Walls — Kenneth Schreiber

Venor — Matt Nye

The Waiting Room — Alex May

Walks the Buffalo — Larry M. Baer

Welcome to Cleveland — Alexandra Gerrity Kern

West Point Wives — Ann Buchanan

Where Teardrops Fall — Jesse Mays Robinson

Xplore — Xavier Burgin & Thomas Wright (story by Woody McClain & Xavier Burgin)

Zero Legacy — Izzy Vaughan & Vic Vaughan

Zuleikha — Missy Malek

Pilot Screenplay Quarterfinalists

9 Will Fall  — Lee Hayes

Alanna's Flowers — Tom Putnaerglis

Alpha — Nicolas Scroggins

Apache — Cameron Barsanti

As American as Fortune Cookies — Hua Shang

Barrio - El Niño — Charlie Gandez

Bea Rose — Natalia Temesgen

Beige — Phillip Reilly

Birdsong — Jennifer Dunn

Bitter Earth — Eric Pumphrey

Blood and Dreams — Suzanne Griffin

The Breaching — Wendy Young

Breaking Sad — Thomas Stroud

Brown Country — Asad Farooqui

Carousel Effect — Thomas F. O'Brien

Carpetbaggers — Matt Thomas

Chloe Bowe — Craig Reynolds

Conundrum Integrated — Micah Paisner

Curved — Sagar Vasishtha

The Disappeared Ones — Helmann Wilhelm

Division 34 — Eyas Shanaah

Double Dads — Jessica Burnett

Eterna — Scott Simonsen

Faith Breaker — Sam Alper

Futurelink — Jason Gilmore

The Grand Dictator — Beth K. Rehman

Grave Matters — Gus Avila

Hominine — Heather Farlinger

Hooked — Brittany Portman & Anthony Patellis and Rob Alicea & Scarlett Camargo

Hopefuls — Erica Owens

I See You — Michael Corleone

In the Gutter — Christine Burright McGuigan

The Islamic Boys (TIB) — Asad Farooqui

Jersey Rican — Ashlei Hardenburg

Kindly Metal Mother — Kurtis Theorin

La Madrina — Adam Santa María

Laughing to Keep from Crying — Jane Barr

The Line — Jeff Bower

Lost in the Flood — Sean Collins-Smith

The Maid — Nicola Pittam

Mia and Parmesan — Mia Volta

Moonflowers — Mary Albanese

Mother Tucker — Steve Holbert

Near Death — Carlo Carere & Erin Carere

No Good Deed: The Oliver Sipple Story — Heather Farlinger

Observer Effect — Paul Frank

The Odds — Wendy Hunt

Of God — Alex Williams

On the Verge — Yair Karlberger

The Paisley Witch Trial — Julia Campanelli

Pangea — T. C. Smith

Permutation — Marcus Russell

Pony Up — Caroline Mungo

Pound Foolish — Susan Feingold

The Process — Jordan Friedberg

Pure — Erika Hakmiller

re.Form(ed) — Johnny Gilligan

Red Flag — Suzanne Slack-Smith

The Sensualist — Suzanne Griffin

Sinnerman — Alexander Hooper

SMDH — Shauna Stanley & Travis Stanley

Soldiers & Bandits — Eduardo Soto-Falcon

Stayers — Teddy Gilmore & Mat Dann

Swim — Chantal Eyong

That Sister Thang — Lindiwe Mueller-Westernhagen & Dale Winton

Throw Like a Girl — Elfi Martinez

The Unvarnished Tales of the Green Fairy  — Jacob Cullen

A Version — Asad Farooqui

Westphall — Keith St. Lawrence

The White Mouse — Heather Farlinger

Short Screenplay Quarterfinalists

33C — John Burdeaux

All Are Welcome — Ross Morin

All You Want to Know — Laurel Kulow

Bahar, Born at Night — Michael Amir Bina

Blank — Bernardo Duran

Borrowed Time — Geoff Murillo

Boundless — Ran Li

Business of Ferrets — Will Berry

Chemo — Marcus Julius

The Chocolate Kandinsky — Suzanne Griffin

Chualar — Ann Marie Pace

Conscience — Brandon Kelley

The Cricket — Gabe Berry

Deadsitting — Gabriel Meyers

Definitely Not a Monster — Brea Angelo

Discord — Helene Taylor & Jax Smith

Divinity — Nelson Downend

Downballot — John Goshorn

Dreamcatcher — Shaun Radecki

Duck — Hilary Burgoon

Dunked — John Bickerstaff

The Errant Signal — Nik Theorin

Evelyn in 7 — Kasia Kowalczyk

Everyday — Ryan Dellaquila

Fantasy Chat — Mindy Fay Parks

Finding Shelter — Mehrtash Mohit

Genie — Paul Frank

Glass Bottles — David González

Greg the Puddle — Shaun Radecki

Haint — Gabriela McNicoll

Hawk Bells — Kristian Mercado

Homunculus — Will Berry

How Hawaii Became a State — Marcus Julius

I-106 — Luis Bou

Kid Midnight — Mychal Sargent

Laika — Kate Balsley

The Last Game — Gina Screen

The Lesson — Kimberly Kalaja

Let Me Know — Adrian Maitra

Man of Style — Deirdre Brenner

Murphy's Law — Zachary Kotiadis

No Room at the Jim Crow Inn — Christina Cottles

Overdue — Shaun Radecki

Parishad — Peter Haig

Pigskin — Susan Polk

Pink & Blue — Nike Uche Kadri

Possum — Lyndal Simpson

Quarry — Nell Ovitt

Refugio — Ray Tezanos

Ringloom — Justin Solaiman

Say Yes — Gabe Berry

The Scarecrow — Gemma Paul

Sight — Mo Morgan

The Slow Death of an Unachievable Dream — Gabriel Jones & Daniel Massa

Squished — Shaun Radecki

Trixie — Stephanie Moore

Until the Last One Falls — Gabe Berry

What Ever Happened to Jonny Faith? — Benjamin Pollack

WP Black Sheep — Jaime Luna

Youth in a Casket — Hannah Aslesen

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