Categories
Culture NYC

The New York International Film Festival Turns 25

The New York International Children’s Film Festival is returning for its 25th anniversary starting today through March 19. Featuring new and emerging artistic films for kid audiences, the NYICFF is bound to surprise and delight families, children, and imaginative adults. With 20 different films to choose from in addition to exclusive short film programs, films ranging from animation to foreign drama to a child’s life will cover every scope of wonder a viewer could hope to have.

Films made in countries including France, Japan, Argentina, Germany, and beyond will be among those exhibited at this cultural festival. Children will find the stories and realities told in these films to be both personable and entrancing, making connections to their own lives and enjoying the possibilities of movie magic. The international scope of the festival also allows them to be exposed to other languages and cultures, which can instill an appreciation for diversity and foreign cultures from an early age. It can also support how children develop qualities such as an open mind and the ability to think critically.

The NYICFF has been carefully curated to offer the best qualities of an in-person movie theater experience while still cautiously planning around COVID-19 realities. In-person screenings will all take place at the SVA Theatre, located at 333 West 23rd St. in Chelsea. Proof of vaccination is required, and all theaters will undergo a rigorous cleaning regime between screenings to ensure complete safety for guests. Virtual programs for children both below and over 5 years old will also be available for those seeking to enjoy the festival from the comfort of their own home.

To learn more about the New York International Children’s Film Festival and purchase tickets, visit https://nyicff.org/festival/. The festival runs March 4 through March 19, with different films and programs available each day.

Categories
Bars Dining Featured

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

This article was published in an earlier edition of Downtown Magazine

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

MIKA BULMASH STARTED Wine for the World because there were no companies focused on how winemaking is transforming emerging regions through social and environmental impact. She was working at the United States Agency for International Development and saw an increasing awareness of fair trade and ethically sourced coffee, tea, and chocolate but not wine, so she headed to South Africa to see how they were making wine in the post-apartheid environment. She could see the need to focus on underrepresented winemakers and wine regions that meet strict criteria in the areas of sustainability, social impact, quality, and practice.

Though Bulmash has a background in molecular and cellular biology and international development, her love for wine was never just a hobby. As soon as she discovered how fascinating the winemaking process is, she began a course of self-study and wine tastings that eventually led her to a WSET Level 3 certification. Instead of starting her own vineyard, Bulmash decided to find other winemakers who practiced the ethical and sustainable methods she was seeking. 

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

Wine for the World curates and tells stories through delicious wines, like those of Ntsiki Biyela, who owns Aslina Wines in South Africa. She is the first black woman winemaker in that country and was given a chance through Suo, another brand Wine for the World works with. Many of the wineries Bulmash works with have been named Global Ethical Company of the Year including Ktima Brintziki, Greece’s first green and carbon-neutral winery; Cave Geisse, a trailblazing boutique winery in Southern Brazil leading the way for the country; and Bosman Family Vineyards in South Africa, all of which champion socially responsible and environmentally sustainable practices. Wine for the World is now starting to explore under-the-radar regions in the US as well. 

 

When asked why philanthropy was so important to her endeavor, Bulmush says, “Personally, it’s what motivates me and my team. It’s also what keeps us going strong in an incredibly crowded and complex industry. There’s no shortage of wine in the US, but having the opportunity to meet fantastic producers doing great things, to tell their stories, to see the excitement in our customers’ eyes, to have them become evangelists for the same reasons that motivate us, and then to see how that impacts our producers and their communities—that’s what makes it so exciting and worthwhile. We love to break boundaries, and combining wine and impact is one boundary we are thrilled to break.” DT wine4theworld.com

A Non-Guilty Pleasure

Categories
Events

This Year’s Chelsea Film Festival Theme: Women

Chelsea_Film_Festival
Photo: Courtesy of upload.wikimedia.org

This year the Chelsea Film Festival announced its theme to be Women in Film & Media. The Chelsea Film Festival is created by the Chelsea Film Institute, an organization that offers arts classes to underprivileged youth in Chelsea, and will be featuring four days of screenings from independent and emerging directors from all over the world.

Beginning on Thursday October 15, the festival will be showcasing the film world’s women with a fantastic jury. Most notable is jury president Estelle Parsons, the Academy Award Winning actress from the 1967 Bonnie & Clyde; also included on the jury are director and producer Tiffany Bartok, television and film actress Margarita Levieva and actor Dorian Missick.

Screen Shot 2015-10-05 at 1.31.12 PM
Chelsea Film Festival’s Opening Film: Solitary. Photo: Courtesy of Chelsea Film Festival

The festival will kick off with the screening of the British film Solitary, a drama concerning family and illusion, directed by Sasha Krane. The film was nominated for eight awards at the 2015 Idyllwild International Festival of Cinema in California, winning three: Best Feature, Best Screenplay, and Best Actress. Among its many other awards, it has also won Best UK Feature at the 2015 London Independent Film Festival and Best Narrative Feature at the Women’s International Film and Arts Festival.

With 17 countries represented through film this year, the third annual festival will be showcasing over 40 fantastic films. As a platform for discovering new voices in cinema as well as celebrating overlooked independent directors, founder Ingrid Jean-Baptiste finds it a way to give a voice to the unheard. [paraphrased from a quote]

Screen Shot 2015-10-05 at 2.06.32 PM
Chelsea Film Festival’s closing film: Valley. Photo: Courtesy of the Chelsea Film Festival.

The film festival will close on October 18 with the showing of Valley, a 2014 drama filmed in Israel about teenagers confronted with violence everywhere they go.

Tickets for the film festival can be purchased here and here.

-by Kari Sonde