Youth Forum

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Shorts: Animation - Short Documentaries - Shorts: Focus on Music
Youth Forum: Narratives - Youth Forum: Docs
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Wednesday/Thursday - Friday - Saturday - Sunday
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The 2004 Woodstock Film Festival Youth Initiative is sponsored by
 

For information about the Youth Career Day, click here.

YOUTH FORUM SCREENINGS

The 2004 Woodstock Film Festival Youth Forum offers a first look at some upand- coming filmmakers from a variety of regional media arts programs, including: the Parsons Pre-College Academy, a weekend and summer intensive program that brings students into New York City to learn about design; the Indie program at Onteora High School; and the Downtown Community TV (DC-TV) Center on Lafayette Street in NYC. There will be two Youth Forum screenings this year. The first will feature fictional, experimental, and animated videos. The second will offer a selection of short documentaries.
 
YOUTH FORUM 1: Fiction and Animation
Sunday, Oct. 17, 10:30am @Woodstock Community Center

Ultra
by Will Lytle of the Indie Program at Onteora High School, explores the concept of Superman.
 
The Gypsy Nun by Isaac Fay and Brett Palfryman. This video short, inspired by a poem by Pablo Neruda, was Brett and Isaac’s final project for their Film Appreciation class at Red Hook High School.

Hugh Jackman with Corey Smith on the set of Making the Grade
Making the Grade by Corey Smith. Infatuated with her handsome teacher, played by Hugh Jackman, a young girl goes to extreme lengths to get what she wants!
 
Trail of Tears, an animated odyssey by Isaac Pond of the Indie Program.

Levitation
by Chris Chu, is a striking montage of cityscapes, textures and repeating and contrasting patterns that make up the city’s infrastructure. Chris is in the Parsons Pre- College Academy.

And then Everything I Saw I Liked
by Ariel Jackson, a short film about young love and creative inspiration.

A Walk in the Park,
a group project by Parsons Pre-College Academy students. Three friends meet in the park and talk about their new girlfriends.

Helium
, a claymation by Lucas Schwab-Hill, Madelyn Klercker, and Ayden Wilber of the Indie Program.

We Will Remember 9/11
by Scott and Matthew Gentile of the Brooklyn Friends School. The students created this film using a true story written by one of their classmates.

 
Youth Forum: Fiction and Animation  ($5)
Sun. Oct. 17, 10:30am at Woodstock Community Center
   
YOUTH FORUM 2: Nonfiction
Sunday, Oct. 17, 12pm @Woodstock Community Center

March 22, 2003 Interviews in Union Square Park
, a documentary by the Parsons Pre- College Academy student production team, showing the varied reactions to war in Iraq.

The Cries of a Teenage Soul
by students at DC-TV, the Downtown Community TV Center on Lafayette Street in Manhattan. Teens from the Bronx talk about their depression and determination to prevail in a world they feel marginalizes them.

Mt. Beacon
, a segment of Our Town, a documentary program created by the sixth, seventh, and eighth graders at the South Avenue Magnet School in Beacon.

Money Problems
, a well-constructed portrayal of the difficulties of finding work and then being a working teen, by the DC-TV students.

Kingston Cares
, a documentary about mixed messages by twelfth graders in the New Visions program at Ulster County BOCES.

You Call This a Riot?
by Becky Sellinger of the Indie program, explores the meaning of social activism. *The WFF Career Day was started in 2001 by Jeremiah Newton, NYU Industry Liaison.

Youth Forum: Documentaries ($5)
Sun. Oct. 17, 12pm at Woodstock Community Center

 

Films, Panels and Concerts by name and category

Wednesday/Thursday - Friday - Saturday - Sunday
When ordering tickets, please consider the distance between Woodstock, Rhinebeck and Hunter.
Click here for more info and directions

*Schedule is subject to change
Tinker Street, Upstate Films and the Catskill Mountain Foundation Theater are 35mm facilities.
Upstate and CMFT will also screen beta sp and digibeta films.
Bearsville, Mountain View, WCC are are beta sp & digibeta

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