Rooftop Films: Selections from the IFP Labs (Event Over)
A sneak peek at trailers and scenes from independent fiction and
documentary films that will be next year's hot festival and indie
releases. Presented in partnership with
IFP and
Indie GoGo
*Venue: Along the East River at Solar One
*Address: East 23rd Street and the East River in Manhattan
*Directions: 6 Train to 23rd street and walk East to the river, or B23 Bus all
the way East.
MAP
*8:00: Doors Open
*8:30: Sound Fix presents live music by
Action Painters
*9:00: IFP selections
*10:30: Open Bar, with free beer courtesy of Radeberger Pilsner
*Admission: FREE!
IFP |
SOLAR ONE |
INDIEGOGO

Rooftop Films is proud to be partnering with IFP to support
emerging filmmakers. IFP is the nation's oldest and largest
organization of independent filmmakers. Since its founding in 1979,
IFP has facilitated the development, financing or distribution of
7,000 independent films, while more than 20,000 filmmakers have
participated in its programs.
IFP’s Independent Filmmaker Lab is a national program
connecting mentors and projects before they are submitted to
festivals. The Labs aim to identify high-quality, independently
produced narrative and documentary features in the rough assembly
stage that can benefit from the mentorship of experienced
professionals. The program challenges filmmakers to realize the
full potential of their footage and stories prior to industry
exposure, providing dynamic advice on technical, creative and
post-production issues.
“All of this year’s Lab participants share a fierce
determination to share their vision with audiences, even if it
requires slinging coffee by day and editing at night,” said
Amy Dotson, Producer and Managing Director of Programming and
supervisor of the Narrative Lab. “These filmmakers are truly
independent, working well outside of the mainstream, and
we’re looking forward to helping them on their journey to
find their voices and make them heard.”
In the Documentary Lab, the selected films reflect the breadth of
documentary film today, ranging from explorations of pressing
social issues (artistic freedom in Tibet; Hurricane Katrina
recovery, immigration) to history and biography (Up with People;
theater director Joseph Chaikin) to highly-personal journeys (a
Chilean-American comes to terms with her father's politics; a
filmmaker rediscovers himself in his native rural Spain). Accepted
projects hail from across the country with filmmakers from New
York, California, Arizona and Mississippi, and include projects by
recent immigrants to the U.S., with filmmakers native to Chile,
Spain, Tibet and Turkey.
"The strong projects selected this year are a microcosm of the
range in diversity in American non-fiction work today, encompassing
the personal, political, and cultural. Despite the variety of style
and subject, these filmmakers are all at a similar place - having
worked largely in isolation within their own creative cocoons for
months and sometimes years. The Lab affords them the opportunity
for input and inspiration from both their peers and mentors as they
begin that final push toward completion" says Milton Tabbot, IFP
Senior Director of Programming and supervisor of the Documentary
Lab.
"IFP's Labs exemplify what we are all about: concentrating on works
in progress and the creative process rather than on just the
finished product," said Michelle Byrd, executive director of IFP.
PARTNERSHIP - SUPPORTING INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS
This event is presented in partnership with
IndieGoGo, an online social marketplace connecting filmmakers and fans to
make independent film happen. The platform provides filmmakers the
tools for project funding, recruiting, and promotion, while
enabling the audience to discover and connect directly with
filmmakers and the causes they support. IndieGoGo is proud to be
collaborating with filmmakers from Rooftop and the IFP Labs.
NARRATIVE LAB FILMS
At The Foot Of A Tree – Alfie, a freckle faced eleven year old boy, seeks
heartfelt and poetic revenge for the beating of his father. Ricky
Shane (Director, Writer); Kelly Jo Reid (Producer, Actress);
Gregory Singer (Editor)
Good Intentions – Meet Etta Milford: Loving Wife…Doting
Mother….Armed Robber. Jim Issa (Director); Pamela
Peacock,Richard Sampson (Producers)
How Would You Feel? Vol. 1-7 – Centering on the story of a young man and woman, friends
whose relationship is perpetually teetering on the edge of
romantic, this experimental narrative explores the ambiguity of
their rapport and is consistently fed by the inhibiting melodrama
of their romantic pasts. Terence Nance (Director, Producer, Writer,
Editor); Yvonne Shirley (Editor); Vincent Wheeler (Sound Designer)
The Mountain Thief – A father and son escape their war-torn village in the
Philippines to seek refuge in a town called Little Hope, a
community of scavengers. Gerry Balasta (Director, Writer);
Desireena Almoradie (Producer); Francisco Diaz (Editor)
Mr. Sadman – In 1990, before the First Gulf War, a Saddam Hussein
body-double loses his job and moves to Los Angeles in search of a
new start. Patrick Epino (Director, Writer); Cindy Fang (Producer)
Periphery – Four college-bound kids take a road trip to Mexico and
find themselves caught up in a pharmaceutical drug smuggling
operation that goes wrong. Duane Allen Humeyestewa (Director,
Producer, Writer); Deepa Donde (Producer, Writer)
Sorry, Thanks – Kira has no attachments. Max has a girlfriend. Sometimes
love is a happy accident, sometimes pure disaster. Mostly: love
means having to say you’re sorry. Dia Sokol, (Director,
Writer); Lauren Veloski (Producer, Writer); Jennifer Lilly (Editor)
St. Nick – A brother and sister run away from home and try to start a
new life, free from adults, all on their own. David Lowery
(Director, Writer, Editor); James M. Johnston (Producer); Adam
Donaghey (Executive Producer)
A Thing As Big As The Ocean – Two Hurricane Katrina survivors leave New Orleans and
travel west into the desert, where their mutual quietness is
overwhelmed by a world of possibilities. Joseph Cashiola (Director,
Producer, Writer); Jeff Harms (Producer, Actor); Nathan Duncan
(Editor)
We Are The Mods – High school loner, Sadie, befriends the wild new girl,
Nico, and together they explore sex, drugs and rock and roll by
embracing 1960’s British Mod culture in present day
California. E.E. Cassidy (Director, Writer, Producer); Robert
Poswall (Producer, DP); Daniel Gabbe (Editor)
Zero Bridge – In occupied Kashmir, where every day is about survival, a
petty criminal’s last chance at escape is threatened when he
faces a moral crisis. Tariq Tapa (Director, Writer, DP, Editor)
DOCUMENTARY LAB FILMS
Burning in the Sun - A young entrepreneur starts producing and selling homemade solar
panels to rural Malians without power, but the harsh realities of
doing business there threaten to overpower his good intentions.
Cambria Matlow, Morgan Robinson (Directors, Producers, Writers,
DPs); Claire Weingarten (Executive Producer)
The Hand of Fatima - The daughter of late NY Times music critic Robert Palmer
investigates her estranged father's transformative encounter with
an ancient Sufi band when she journeys to the remote village of
Jajouka, experiences its sacred musical rituals, and comes to terms
with her father's legacy. Augusta Palmer (Director, Writer); Chris
Arnold (Producer, Editor)
Mine: Taken by Katrina - Hundreds of thousands of people lost their pets in Hurricane
Katrina, but 15,000 were heroically rescued and sent to shelters
and adoptive homes around the country. When the original owners
want their pets back, rescuers and animal lovers are divided over
what is right for the animals and what is fair to the families who
love them. Geralyn Pezanoski (Director, Producer, Writer); Erin
Essenmacher (Producer)
The Presence of Joseph Chaikin - The story of the most innovative late-century American theater
director in his own words, and those of his collaborators.
Chaikin's career as actor, director, writer, and leading light in
new theater of the 1960's, belies his lifelong struggle with
rheumatic heart disease, an ever-present harbinger of death. Troy
Word (Director, Producer, Writer, DPs); Encke King (Writer, Editor)
The Stranger's Land - An observational portrait of the filmmaker's return, after a
long absence, to rural Spain, where he grew up - rediscovering a
place lost to time and memory. Xavier Marrades Orga (Director,
Producer, Writer, DP, Editor)
Tibet In Song - Ngawang Choephel tells the story of Tibetan folk music, and how
Chinese policies have systematically destroyed it since the
takeover of Tibet - and his own story of filmmaker turned political
prisoner. Ngawang Choephel (Director, Producer, Writer); Tim
Bartlett (Editor)
Tijuana, Nada Más - A story of visible and invisible borders faced by four homeless
children in the busiest frontier city in the world. Yolanda Pividal
(Director, Producer, Writer); Carmen Vidal (DP); Sara Booth
(Editor)
Ulises' Odyssey - The story of the filmmaker's struggle as a Chilean-American
woman to mend a 30-year rift between her father and uncle who were
on opposite sides in the 1973 military coup that brought General
Pinochet to power in Chile. Lorena Manriquez (Director, Producer,
Writer); Miguel Picker (Director, Producer, DP, Editor)
Smile ‘Til It Hurts - The story of the sacrifices and secrets of clean-cut ”Up
With People” who believed they could change the world. Music
is their weapon of choice to attract minds to the American values
of Freedom and Democracy in the riotous 1960s. Lee Storey
(Director, Writer); Bari Pearlman (Producer)
The Visitors - A documentary about the passengers of a charter bus that leaves
New York City every weekend for visits to prisons in upstate New
York, reflecting the struggles of a unique culture living at the
intersection of confinement and the free world. Melis Birder
(Director, Producer, Writer, DP, Editor)
* * *
Lead support for the Independent Filmmaker Labs is provided by The
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, with additional
funding from Hollywood Foreign Press Association, New York State
Council for the Arts and SAGIndie.


Terence