Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2011

jesse boykins iii/dr. woo/prototype 3010

Jesse Boykins III | Prototype 3010, a short film from LightUp Film on Vimeo.




Jesse Boykins lll is a standout in a conglomerate of young NYCers doin the jazzy rnb thing. all labeling aside, he has a beautiful voice and he's good at singing beautiful songs-that he pinned and arranged himself- about love. I love this film; a callob between Dr. Woo & brotha Boykins featuring MeLo-X. more film, show footage and concepts here: jbiiimusic.com. Check for Dr. Woo here: drwooart.com and MeLo-X here: melo-x.blogspot.com
peace

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

TIME TO GIVE THANKS :: RELAX : GROOVE : BUILD


BLOOMBARS SHORT FILM EVENING :: 7PM TODAY :: FREE

Monday, November 1, 2010

Waste Land Trailer

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WASTE LAND Official Trailer from Almega Projects on Vimeo.



Waste Land is a film by Vik Muniz, a Brooklyn-based photographer and artist, about his trip back to his native Brazil to document the largest garbage dump in the world called “Jardim Gramacho”. Through the film, Muniz works to transform the lives of those who live and work in the dump by capturing them in photos and donating the sales of those photos back to the people in the dump.Huge Question marks.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

The Little Girl Who Sold the Sun

Another amazing film by Senegalese film director Djibril Diop Mambety, The Little Girl Who Sold the Sun, La Petite Vendeuse de Soleil...

Film Still

Inasmuch as Le Franc serves as a parable for a pervasive moral climate of disempowerment, Mambéty’s subsequent installment for Tales of Little People, The Little Girl Who Sold The Sun is its poignant and sublime antithesis.

The film centers on a young, illiterate, crippled girl named Sili (Lissa Balera) from a shantytown on the outskirts of Dakar who decides one day to abandon her blind grandmother’s vocation of begging in the street and take up the physically demanding job of selling newspapers – a task usually undertaken by boys who can aggressively peddle them at busy intersections throughout the city. Given an initial allotment of thirteen copies of the less popular, government newspaper, Le Soleil, Sili’s first day on the job proves to be auspicious when a well-to-do businessman, encouraged by her initiative and self-reliance, offers to buy out all her remaining copies, leaving her free to share her unexpected good fortune with her grandmother and a few neighboring friends for the afternoon, and even pleading for the case of a wrongfully accused woman who has been imprisoned without charges at a local police station.

In time, Sili forges a thriving business with her refreshingly low-key sales approach, cultivating a growing clientele of customers who go out of their way to buy her newspaper. But as the competition becomes increasingly desperate and cutthroat, Sili’s popularity soon places her in the crosshairs of rival peddlers who see her presence as a turf invasion and resolve to thwart her profitable enterprise by any means necessary.