Urbanworld Film Festival 2024

Movie Review Coming Soon!

Directed by by Frank Sputh, Bin Martha, Kolumbianerin (I'm Martha, Colombian) is a slowcumentary, the nearly three-hour portrait of a young Afro-Colombian woman, a slow, closely observing documentary.

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Expressway Cinema Rentals is Philadelphia's leading photo & video rental resource for the creative community.

Visual Jedi LLC | Specializing in Video Production from concept to creation. Storyboard, audio mixing, editing, graphics design and more!

Pour something different! Premium specialty loose leaf teas sourced in Africa. Sibahle - We Are Beautiful!

The Ultimate Vegan Experience! We are Vegan Soul. Celebrate a new way of life with healthier food.

Fine Art Reproductions - Limited Edition Giclees on Canvas and Limited Edition Prints by World-Renowned Visual Artist and Designer, Synthia SAINT JAMES

 

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*All 31 "Prompts" might not be featured on this blog; I have my own schedule and topics to adhere to.

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Come SUPPORT the makers and SHOP for the holidays at MADE@BOK Small Biz Saturday Market where you can get a head start on The Madlab Post’s Shop Small Treasure Hunt with movie tickets, videogames and more! This is a market featuring crafts from artists, designers, makers and small businesses that create within the walls of the historic Bok building. Free entry!

FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION:
Perspectives directed by Neer Shelter has qualfied for the 2024 Academy Awards

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FYC: Academy qualified short film 'Perspectives' directed by Neer Shelter | Oscars Shortlist

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📣 MADE @ BOK SPRING MARKET IS HERE 📣 Our first Market of 2022! On Sunday, May 1st from 11-4pm, come grab a gift for mom, a treat for your loves or something to brighten up your life in the way only springtime can like clothing, jewelry, ceramic and vintage wares, a brownie or two (or five), and more! 🤗 We'll be setting up in the gym as well as all the shops in retail row through the (new and improved!) Dudley St door.

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Rent Abyss: The Greated Proposal Ever, a short film made with a diverse cast & crew working together to tell a story about Love, Friendship and PTSD! This urban military homecoming drama is a candid glimpse into the troubles surrounding a U.S. Army Sergeant who gets stranded by SEPTA in the inner city when a wild marriage proposal shakes up his plans to reunite with the only family he knows. 

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Monday
Apr012013

You’ll never Leave Africa… – The Danny Archer Effect #atozchallenge

*Spoiler Alert: This post contains information that reveals important plot points in the film it references. If you have not yet watched the movie and plan to do so in the future, some of the following content might spoil the plot and your viewing experience. Read at your own risk.

In Honor of Letter A marking the first day of the A to Z Challenge, I would like to say a special thanks to Arlee Bird at Tossing It Out, for starting this blogathon. He makes it possible for thousands of bloggers from around the world to meet new people, build confidence in their writing, expand their knowledge and keep the fun in blogging. Thank You Arlee!

“You’ll never leave Africa” is what a ruthless military colonel says to a diamond and gun smuggler named Danny Archer in the dramatic thriller “Blood Diamond” starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Djimon Hounsou and Jennifer Connelly. These discouraging words are delivered in such a matter-of-fact way that one would believe Archer doesn’t stand a chance. A combination of business savvy, determination, warfare survival skills and compassion are what leads him to a kind of promise land that is much more valuable than the destination he initially set out to reach. Although Danny Archer is a fictional character, we can learn a lot from him in regards to selflessness, creating a legacy and making our every breathing moment count no matter how much time we have left.

While in jail, Archer met a mine worker named Solomon who possessed a large diamond. So he manipulated Solomon’s interests in finding the miner’s kidnapped son (who has now become a child soldier), upon their release from jail, to get access to this diamond. Archer considered the diamond to be his ticket out of “this God forsaken country” we call Africa. Archer then met a journalist named Maddy who challenged his intentions, as lives were placed in danger – and even destroyed -- in the process of this man’s selfish quest to do whatever is necessary to retrieve the precious stone.

When Archer’s colleagues start acting shady and turn on him, he starts to realize that there are other people who deserve just as much (if not more) of a chance at a ticket to freedom, as he does. The dangerous mission to find Solomon’s hidden diamond also brings Archer in contact with people whom he never met before – yet suddenly became his new allies. Although a rare diamond turned Archer into a greedy monster at times, he used his very last moments to bring change to the brutal realities that Solomon – and people like him face in the wake of political tensions and war that ravish the very place they once called home.

Since the diamond never belonged to Archer in the first place, he paid a heavy and unimaginable price to obtain it, which goes to show that one person cannot rightfully find peace, happiness or riches through the fruits of another person’s labor – especially when these things are sought after in a self-absorbed manner. It is something that Archer may have realized when he chose to sacrifice himself -- and his dream of leaving Africa – for Solomon’s benefit. Solomon found peace, happiness, safety and riches through the fruits of Archer’s labor via connections with Maddy and a pilot who – in addition to the diamond – were Solomon’s “tickets” to a better place.

Archer and Solomon’s experiences are an example of how sometimes, the best way to get to where we want to go is by taking actions that work for the greater good of more people beyond our own reach. Danny Archer helped another man survive war, reunite with family and start a new life in another country – one not laced with conflict and devastation. It is because of Archer that Solomon was able to escape a tragic and possibly deadly fate. So in a sense, Archer did get what he wanted -- his body may not have left Africa but by helping Solomon, he reached his destination – in spirit. Archer’s memory lives on through the survival of a fisherman-turned-miner and his family as well as through Maddy’s telling of the trials and corruption that got them to a new, more promising land.

Danny Archer gained fame, friendship, character, integrity and a legacy that affects the lives of other people – individuals and families he will never know.

Through his actions, he made his life more valuable than one piece of jewelry or plane ticket could ever bring him. It is a prime example of what the Leesburg 33 survivor said, about there not being any human gains without somebody sacrificing, in Shari Thompson’s documentary.

So the next time you long to relocate or have a healthier lifestyle or achieve some other type of goal, I ask you to consider the possibilities of reaching it by using your knowledge and/or resources to help someone else.

Do YOU have an “Africa” that you want to leave? If so, what is your “ticket” out of there?

After slacking off on The Monday Movie Meme last week, it returns today but is going to be quick throughout the month while I do the A to Z Challenge. This week’s theme is based on Danny Archer’s quest described in my A to Z Challenge post above: One-Way Ticket.

 

Share on your blog or in the comments section, ONE movie featuring someone who is depending on one key thing to change his or her circumstances.

My selection for this week’s One-Way Ticket theme is: “Children of Men. The main character in this movie risks his life to save the human race by aiding in the transport of the world’s only pregnant girl. The girl’s baby is his and the world’s “ticket” to a better existence.

What ONE movie have YOU watched that features someone trying to change their circumstances by obtaining one particular thing?

Friday
Mar292013

Courage under Fire – An #AtoZChallenge Theme Reveal

What makes life worth living? It’s an optional question I asked twelve people who, along with me, are hosting the 2013 Blogging from A to Z Challenge.

The question stemmed from wanting to know if men and women see value in their lives through external forces, internal elements, artificial sources of material or a combination of them all. I also wondered if the answers that followed would help me find one or at the very least -- narrow down a place to identify it since I’ve been looking for an answer to this question for quite some time. After going out of my mind between January and now, trying to pick a theme for the A to Z Challenge (I had one already planned for months and then changed my mind several times), I still came up empty.

So, I decided that the majority of my posts in April will be focused around reflections and perspectives on the very question that has occupied my attention for so long. Fortunately for me, I recently had a brief epiphany that just might be the answer: A New Day.

New days bring with them a chance for new beginnings and that alone with what makes live worth living. Each new day brings with it a fresh start and second, (or third, fourth, fifth, twentieth, seventieth and so on) chances to obtain or experience or feel more, less or the same of what you did yesterday.

A chance…

  • To make amends where needed.
  • To honor the memory of our fellow man and woman whose death is not in vein – especially the brave ones, especially the innovators, especially the inspiring ones, especially the ones who led by example and especially those who we consider heroes.
  • To re-start again or continue where we left off.
  • To learn by doing and do things differently or better this time around, if necessary.

What makes life worth living is being able to get back up again when you fall without a safety net. It’s the ability to pick up the pieces after they crumble, and then build a new puzzle. It’s a chance to even find new pieces of the puzzle, if the ones you already had before are gone or no longer available. It’s an opportunity to carve out a new path if the one you were on yesterday was not working. It is your do-over moment; complete with yet another 24 hours to rebuild, rejuvenate or refine the very key to a life well lived – based on whatever you consider a life well lived to be.

We wait for holidays and special occasions to live it up – experience joy, peace, happiness, freedom or a renewed sense of self: Birthdays to celebrate life, New Year’s Eve/New Year’s Day to reflect and transform, etc. but none of us are certain if we’re going to live to execute our plans for these occasions.

All who awake each morning on this earth have the same 24 hours to use as we see fit. Our choices are what make all the difference in these 24 hours that we have in common. Each new day brings with it a choice to waste your time being idle or to spend your time being productive – once your time is up, it’s over. One can look at this in the perspective of losing or running out of time but I know that is a self-destructive mindset to be in. On the contrary, I think that even if its 11:59pm, you still have 60 seconds to relax and rest or laugh and cheer. Either way, it’s your call – better to be in peace or filled with joy than in anger and discomfort.

Since the only thing guaranteed in life is death, I believe it would be beneficial for us to make the most of whatever time we’re given – in each day that we receive – by thinking and behaving in accordance with the things that we deem as being worth our next breath. Here is the kicker, however, that tends to stop us dead in our tracks: Life is Hard.

It is not easy to live and some of us are often in a state of constant battle. We’re at war with other people; we’re at war with ourselves, we’re at war with policies and beliefs -- and many times, we don’t even know who or what we’re at war with nor do we know why we’re at war at all. The result is a destruction of our own will to triumph and rise above when things don’t go as planned. Victory is not won in a life that has no value. Instead, it is made possible by having the balls to navigate through this madness and find a place where you can be the change and truth you want to see in the world. It’s about having (or at least seeking, if you don’t) courage under fire.               

When my 26 observations about the value of life and all its inner battles from A to Z are introduced in April, I hope they reflect an inspiration from which I’ve now become able to put it altogether – a 20th Century Fox movie about an Army Lt. Colonel, played by Denzel Washington, who faces his own demons when investigating whether a Captain, played by Meg Ryan, deserves the Medal of Honor for being killed in combat.

Through stories about what happened and didn’t happen in their war zone, the characters in this mystery thriller are given opportunities to make amends and rewrite history.

When given a new day, some stuck to their guns no matter what damage it cost them, while others – particularly Washington’s and Ryan’s characters – used their time to make things right (whether it be for the benefit of themselves or that of a fellow human being) when things were going so wrong.

What do YOU think makes life worth living? Are YOU participating in the A to Z Challenge?

I want to send a special shout out to Mina Lobo at Some Dark Romantic and David Macaulay at Brits in the USA for encouraging A to Z Challenge participants to reveal their themes before April arrives.

Monday
Mar182013

My Top Ten Movie Countdown - Girl Power Edition!

Alex J. Cavanaugh’s Top Ten Movie Countdown Blogfest highjacks this week’s Monday Movie Meme. In honor of Women’s History Month, I’m remixing the Ninja Captain’s blog fest instructions for a spotlight on lady directors – in a countdown of my Top Ten Movies Directed by Women – at least, the ones that I can remember.

Some of the films on this list do not make up a comprehensive representation of my ultimate favorite movies.

What they do have in common, however, is the fact that they meet both of the following criteria: I would watch them again and I would recommend that they be watched at least once. So, the theme for this week’s Monday Movie Meme is inspired by my fellow A to Z Co-Host’s blogfest as well as Women’s History Month: Top Ten Movie Countdown - Girl Power Edition!

Share on your blog or in the comments section, your top ten favorite movies directed by women that you can think of at this moment. Also link back to this post and visit the blogs of fellow Monday Movie Meme and/or Top Ten Movie Blogfest participants.

Here are my selections – in no particular order -- for this week’s Top Ten Movie Countdown – Girl Power Edition! theme.

10. Born into Brothels

The children of Kolkata’s (or Calcutta) prostitutes learn how to use cameras and tell stories about their surroundings through art in this Oscar-winning documentary, directed by Zana Briski.

 

9. My Tehran for Sale

An aspiring actress is forced to lead a double life due to her country’s ban on the arts in this Australian-Iranian film directed by Granaz Moussavi. Actress Marzieh Vafamehr was arrested and sentenced to one year and 90 lashes in Iran, for appearing in “My Tehran for Sale” without a hijab.

Although she was eventually released – not without appeals from Amnesty International and the movie’s producers, there is something to be said about a person who literally risked her life to make art and aid in the freedom of expression.

8. Middle of Nowhere

A young woman’s life is turned upside down when her husband’s prison sentence creates a rough future that she didn’t ask for in this Sundance Film Festival-winning drama, directed by Ava DuVernay.

 

7. Player Hating: A Love Story

As he prepares for the launch of his album, Brooklyn-based rapper Half-A-Mill introduces viewers to an environment that many people would like to deny even exists in this documentary directed by Maggie Hadleigh-West. Maggie went through a heck of a time to make this movie. Hats off to her! Expect my long overdue interview with this director to be posted here soon.

 

6. Humpday

Two heterosexual male friends embark on making a gay porno in this comedy, directed by Lynn Shelton. What started as a drunken dare at one late night party gets serious enough to almost ruin one guy’s marriage. It also motivates both friends to question their state of overall happiness and where they fall on the quality-of-life scale. I wanted to see this movie so bad when it was showing at Rooftop Films Summer Series a few years ago – particularly because the film’s star Mark Duplass was in attendance. He is also a filmmaker and has made some funny movies himself.

Duplass aside, can you guess what’s so inappropriately awesome about “Humpday?” I especially like how at first glance, you’d have the impression that a man directed this movie. If I showed the poster and movie trailer to five random people on the street and asked them to guess the director’s gender, I’d be willing to bet my $5 IndieGoGo perk that most, if not all of them go the testosterone route.

5. Our Rhineland

Two sisters are faced with making the toughest choices of their lives in this short film, directed by Faren Humes. It is a beautifully shot and well-crafted story about an ugly part of history – the sterilization of mixed-race women. WATCH IT.

 

 

4. Just Another Girl on the I.R.T.

An around-the-way girl dates an older guy (I think…haven’t watched it since grade school) and all hell breaks loose in this movie, about teenage pregnancy, directed by Leslie Harris.

 

3. August Rush

A runaway orphan follows music wherever he can find it, hoping that doing so will lead him to his parents, in this drama directed by Kristen Sheridan. Despite this movie being as cliché as they come, I think it’s cute and have a soft spot for Kerri Russell, ever since “Felicity” graced the tube. I can still recall the day I went to see “August Rush” at The Roxy, a small movie theater that was independently owned until one of the local arts organizations bought it in 2012 – my bad to digress…

2.Too Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar

Who knew that Patrick Swayze could parlay a wardrobe of dresses and high heels into a Golden Globe nomination?! If you don’t know, now you know – this road trip comedy about drag queens, directed by Beeban Kidron, is one of my all-time favorite movies…I mean, ever!!! I could not only watch this flick multiple times but would definitely recommend it to anyone in need of some afternoon laughs.

1. The Leesburg 33

This documentary, directed by Shari Thompson, is about the 33 teenage girls who were locked in an abandoned military stockade in Georgia, for protesting during the Civil Rights Movement. Adding “The Leesburg 33” film to this week’s Monday Movie Meme/ Top Ten Countdown list almost has me in tears – frankly because it seems like it was just yesterday – well, more like five minutes ago that I watched this movie.

I only saw it once, yet, experience the same thoughts and emotions when the movie comes to mind – not because of the subject that it touches on, which includes racism and the illegal incarceration and abuse of minors.

To this day, I may not remember most of the details of what the girls endured during those six weeks that they were held – but I do remember something that one of them said in a scene when asked if she was angry when looking back, now as an adult, on what happened: “No human gain is every made without somebody sacrificing!” For many reasons, some that I might not even be able to explain, “The Leesburg 33” is one of the films that sticks to me – one that I will likely hold dear for the rest of my days on this earth.

What are YOUR Top Ten Movies directed by Women?