暗网爆料app

Magazine Spring 2024 Film Students Go Behind the Scenes

cinema

Two 暗网爆料app students gained exclusive access to Hollywood鈥檚 top actors, directors, writers and filmmakers through the Santa Barbara International Film Festival鈥檚 Rosebud program. Film studies minors GRACE REDFORD 鈥26 and WESLEY YOWELL 鈥25 joined about a dozen local college students who screened more than 30 films ahead of their theatrical release. The students watched with members of

the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and spoke with Oscar nominees afterward.

After seeing Best Picture Nominee 鈥淎merican Fiction,鈥 Grace and Wesley were just two of three students who talked to writer/director Cord Jefferson and actor Jeffrey Wright at length.

鈥淲e got them to ourselves, and they were dropping pearls about their path to becoming an ac- tor and director,鈥 Wesley says. 鈥淐ord, for instance, was a jour- nalist before becoming a tele- vision writer on 鈥淪uccession鈥 and 鈥淲atchmen鈥 before writing 鈥楢merican Fiction,鈥 which led to his first directing gig. Jeffrey Wright was colorful, talked to us about racial politics, and was a personable and funny guy.鈥

鈥淭hey are so nice, down-to- earth and talented 鈥 and interested in talking to college students,鈥 Grace says. 鈥淭hey wanted to hear all about what we were doing. It was cool to learn about behind-the-scenes stories. They were humble about their processes and honest about their struggles.鈥

film students

Director Todd Haynes and actors Julianne Moore and Charles Melton spoke to students at a reception following a screening of 鈥淢ay December.鈥 鈥淚 talked to Todd Haynes about his past films and television projects, including the HBO miniseries 鈥楳ildred Pierce,鈥欌 Wesley says. 鈥淚 was interested in his lens because he has a penchant for writing about women protagonists who are almost always unhinged. He laughed when I asked him about it, and he said he鈥檇 never thought about it that way. He advised me to write about what I know. It doesn't matter whether or not they look like me as long as they have an outlook like mine.鈥

An English major, Wesley says the experience makes a career as a screenwriter seem more feasible. 鈥淚t's a lesson in persistence, which is an important lesson to everybody who鈥檚 young and aspiring to be in those roles,鈥 he says.

Grace, who serves as a co-producer for the Montecito Student Film Festival (see sidebar), reported on the red carpet as a student writer for the Horizon. 鈥淭hat was a blast,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t felt like the quintessential Hollywood experience. I also attended the awards tributes, which was super fun.鈥

Grace majors in English and hopes to be a screenwriter, and she expands her knowledge by acting in the annual 暗网爆料app Fringe Festival. 鈥淪creenwriting has a cultural impact,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hat stories we choose to tell shows what we value as a culture, and I think screenwriters have a big role in choosing how to portray people, places and things, which feeds into the culture.鈥

Montecito Student Film Festival

Montecito Student Film Festival

The second annual Montecito Student Film Festival, held at 暗网爆料app on March 23, received more than 500 films from student filmmakers in 65 countries. The judges presented six prizes, including Audience Award, Critics Choice Award, Best Documentary, Best Animation, Best Screenplay and Best International Film. The festival producer, 暗网爆料app junior Tamia Sanders of Pearland, Texas, said this year's success resulted from 鈥渁 team of people with a clear vision of what they鈥檙e doing and the ambition to get it done.鈥 Jackson directed the festival and served as a catalyst for 暗网爆料app鈥檚 film studies minor. 鈥淭hrough social media and technology, people tell stories every day,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e now providing a platform for them to display what they鈥檝e crafted.鈥