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Directed by by Frank Sputh, Bin Martha, Kolumbianerin (I'm Martha, Colombian) is a slowcumentary, the nearly three-hour portrait of a young Afro-Colombian woman, a slow, closely observing documentary.

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Expressway Cinema Rentals is Philadelphia's leading photo & video rental resource for the creative community.

Visual Jedi LLC | Specializing in Video Production from concept to creation. Storyboard, audio mixing, editing, graphics design and more!

Pour something different! Premium specialty loose leaf teas sourced in Africa. Sibahle - We Are Beautiful!

The Ultimate Vegan Experience! We are Vegan Soul. Celebrate a new way of life with healthier food.

Fine Art Reproductions - Limited Edition Giclees on Canvas and Limited Edition Prints by World-Renowned Visual Artist and Designer, Synthia SAINT JAMES

 

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FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION:
Perspectives directed by Neer Shelter has qualfied for the 2024 Academy Awards

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FYC: Academy qualified short film 'Perspectives' directed by Neer Shelter | Oscars Shortlist

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Rent Abyss: The Greated Proposal Ever, a short film made with a diverse cast & crew working together to tell a story about Love, Friendship and PTSD! This urban military homecoming drama is a candid glimpse into the troubles surrounding a U.S. Army Sergeant who gets stranded by SEPTA in the inner city when a wild marriage proposal shakes up his plans to reunite with the only family he knows. 

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Entries in Food (9)

Wednesday
Nov092022

'Hungry Now' Documentary Film Connects Food Insecure Kids to Homeless Adults

Where does your food come from? Some people raise chickens. Other folks grow fresh produce on a farm while their neighbors go fishing for lobster and work several jobs to make ends meet. Then, there are those who visit food pantries and soup kitchens if one is available in their town. If you have a picture in your mind of the types of folks who source their goods from the latter, you may be surprised to learn that people from all walks of life frequent such places.  

HUNGRY NOW directed by Alan Kryszak premieres 3p.m. on November 13 at the Collins Center for the Arts. This is a Free event. No ticket purchase is necessary to attend.At least that’s the case at Manna Food Pantry in Maine, where they feed the working poor and people with fixed incomes, as seen in Hungry Now, an upcoming documentary feature film directed by Alan Kryszak. 

 Filmed in Coastal & Downeast Maine over a 2-year period, Hungry Now traces the tragic path where a fresh-faced child starts below the poverty line, and lands with stability or chaos, depending on what lies between his or her middle school and adult years. 

Alan worked with several student crew members from University of Maine at Machias to make this film, looking to connect some dots between food-insecure kids being supported by parents and teachers, to the sketchy shadows off the road. Through direct voices of “the hungry, the homeless and the helpers,” Hungry Now sets out to answer everyday questions about topics from poverty to food deserts to why the grocery shelves are empty.  

"We eat more food than we can produce," says one of the men working at a slaughterhouse as he offers insight on cost-prohibitive issues that the industry deals with, why the supermarkets are low or out of stock and how the supply chain could improve if more residents purchased local meat, directly from butchers. 

Also catch the broadcast premiere of HUNGRY NOW directed by Alan Kryszak November 24 on PBS/Maine Public Television at 9p.m. At the food pantry, it’s not uncommon for the all-volunteer staff to meet someone who has to choose between food and gas for their car to get to work. Yet, one of the most interesting aspects of this film is that whether someone is doing well or are down on their luck, most of the people you will meet think that the next person has it worse than them.

That was the case for a man who’s been homeless following a job-related accident and has since been living on $800 a month for disability. He passed up a food card so that it could be given to a couple near a dumpster, including a mother who had previously dealt with heroin addiction.  

Then there’s the matter of food waste, the Native American recalling having to choose between child abuse and food, and other factors that lead many people to struggle to meet basic needs such as food, clothing and a home. “It's kind of sad being 58 years old and having to rely on a food pantry because you're broke,” says one woman who was living in a domestic violence shelter. Her money was going toward bills, including medical expenses.  

One of the things that stood out about this film is the reminder that food insecurity affects more people than we may know, including many students who get most of their food from school and adults, some who are parents that still have a hard time putting food on the table even when they’re working multiple jobs. As part of the University of Maine’s “Right to Food” film series, Hungry Now connects the struggling child and homeless adult who seem to walk their whole lives uphill, in a nation of wealth and promise. 

Hungry Now premieres 3p.m. on November 13, 2022 at the Collins Center for the Arts, followed by its broadcast premiere at 9 p.m. on PBS/Maine Public Television, November 24, 2022. 

Friday
Nov052021

Not Your Average Dinner and a Movie: The Most Magnificent Thing #NaBloPoMo 

A few lucky folks who came to see and vote on storyboard artist Arna Selznick’s The Most Magnificent Thing when this STEM themed film screened during the Short Film Slam were in for an extra treat! 

Checking out one of the structures in the gym at CANstruction 2019. Participating teams included USA Architects, JKRP, Turner Construction and more. You had to be there to see it.The Madlab Post studio was in its second year of operation while a design and build contest called CANstruction was happening in the gym at Bok. 

Every year, teams of architects, engineers, contractors and designers get together to build life-size structures made out of canned food.

Following a public exhibit, the cans used for these structures are donated to local hunger relief organization, Philabundance 

Based on Ashley Spires’ best-selling book of the same name, The Most Magnificent Thing is an animated short starring Academy Award winner Whoopi Goldberg, Alison Pil (Vice; American Horror Story) and Lilly Barlam (The Handmaid's Tale).

The film is about the perseverance and creativity of an architect’s daughter who receives her very own tool box, and then embarks on a quest to build a masterpiece for her pet pug. 

Have YOU seen The Most Magnificent Thing? 

What’s YOUR CANstruction pick.... Beehive or Butterflies? 

When was the last time YOU built something from the ground up? How did it turn out? 

Sunday
Oct092016

German Food Truck The Flying Deutschman Shares Rolling Movie Theater Plans for Philly and shnit Film Festival Picks 

Made in Switzerland, the shnit International short Film Festival selection BON VOYAGE is about a couple on a holiday cruise and their encounter with a sinking refugee boat.Did you know the 14th Annual shnit International Short Film Festival is the largest of its kind, taking place simultaneously in multiple cities across five continents? On Saturday October 15, Philadelphia is joining this global community of movie buffs who are coming together to share the excitement of world cinema.

Head chef Stirling Sowerby at The Flying Deutschman, a German food truck calling on your vote to become a finalist in the 2016 Brassys (Square’s Small Business Awards celebrating the boldest businesses in America) recently took a moment with me to discuss his transnational encounters and most anticipated films in the shnit CINEMAS lineup for Philly.

During our Q&A it quickly became clear that Sowerby’s extensive travels demonstrate the shnit International Short Film Festival’s mission of embracing diversity and exchange between creators and audiences from different cultures and backgrounds. “I have been in England, Germany, France, Austria, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, France, Spain, Turkey, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Bahamas (that's where I met my wife); I traveled almost all states up and down the east coast and some of the central states; Mexico, I think that's it” he says. 

The Flying Deutschman and his main crew are in the running to become one of 35 finalists in the next round of the Brassys, in the food and drink category.Honored as a local Vendys finalist, The Flying Deutschman shared that he would also love to hike up to Machu Picchu in Peru, Tibet, and “experience the equator somewhere in Africa.” As a presenter for one of the few shnit Film Festival screenings in the United States, I not only have the pleasure of bringing epic films to the city, but also making it possible for Philly to have a voice in picking the winner of the shnit CINEMAS Audience Award.

Here is a further sneak peek into the films you can expect to see at this year’s show, some of the innovations that illustrate why you should tell everyone you know to vote for The Flying Deutschman in the Brassys, and more from the chef who has successfully carved out a space for himself in the culinary arts world.

Madlab Post: What kind of adventures did you experience during your time abroad?

The Flying Deutschman: There are many, how about when I was in the Bahamas where I met my wife.  It was me and 3 friends of which one of them was a pilot.  So we had this rental plane and planned to fly from Miami to Nassau; the problem was that with 4 of us and the luggage we were too heavy. So Frank, the pilot, flew me and the luggage over to Nassau with the mission to find a hotel for us while he would fly back and pick up the other 2. This was in 1989, so contacting people was still a little more complicated and as hours passed and no one showed up at the airport I got nervous and asked someone about my friend; he had left Miami but had not landed yet.

So they look into it and tell me that they had no idea where he was and that he had declared an emergency 20 minutes into the flight; that's all they had. Let's just say now I was really nervous -- all kind of scenarios went through my head. It took until 10pm that night ‘til Frank finally got a hold of me through the number I had left at the Airport and he told me that he had a Generator problem and returned back to Miami to get it fixed. Somehow the tower in Miami forgot to log that and that's what caused all that confusion. So those were some hell-raising hours thinking I had lost 3 of my friends.

MP: Is film a universal language?

TFD: Pictures speak a thousand words. I think that says it all.

MP: How many languages do you speak?

TFD: I speak German and English. I would like to become better at Spanish.

Made in Germany and Austria, the shnit International Short Film Festival selection DIE BADEWANNE (The Bathtub) is about three brothers trying to re-enact a childhood photo to prepare an original present for their mother.MP: Which film in the shnit Cinemas lineup for Philly interests you the most?

TFD: Die Badewanne (The Bathtub), for obvious reasons, but also the Swiss one – Bon Voyage,  I think the subject matter is very timely and deals with the biggest problem The European Union has faced in a long time, far greater than anything they have seen since WW2.

MP:  What is one of your favorite foods from another country or culture?

TFD: Thai by far; the food is clear, fresh, crisp, light and healthy.

MP: Can you describe one of your favorite foreign movies?

TFD: I know I saw many movies with subtitles, but I just can't recall them anymore. I keep thinking of Metropolis by Fritz Lang but to me that's not really foreign.

MP: What inspired you to want to add giant LED screens to The Flying Deutschman and what kind of movies are you planning to show on your food truck?

TFD: Turning the truck into a rolling Movie Theater is another way to create revenue. I am open minded as far as movie selection goes. I would start with old music movies….Stop Making Sense by Talking Heads,  Live in Pompeii by Pink Floyd,  She's the Boss by Mike Jagger, Help by the Beatles, Tommy by The Who, Breaking Glass by Hazel O'Connor. 

I would surely be on board for showing movies from independent filmmakers; it's publicity, so hell yeah. I am open minded regarding genres. The whole thing is new and I have to see what will and will not work. 

Thanks a bunch to The Flying Deutschman for discussing shnit short films, food and culture with me! Cinema fans can GET TICKETS to see some of the world’s best films.

The Flying Deutschman menu. Jaeger Schnitzel with Dumplings and Red Cabbage Foodie fans in South Philly can find The Flying Deutschman at The Navy Yard this month:

  • Tuesday October 18th 11am – 2pm
  • Thursday October 27th 11am – 2pm

*The Flying Deutschman might also run a solo down at Clark Park on short notice. Get updates on the truck's Facebook page.

Which country do YOU think produces the best films?

What is YOUR favorite food from another country or culture?

Did YOU vote for The Flying Deutschman yet?