The 2008 East Lansing Film Festival

2008 East Lansing Film FestivalThe 11th annual East Lansing Film Festival (ELFF) takes place March 12-20, 2008. The ELFF the largest and most diverse film festival in Michigan and screens more than 100 independent and foreign feature, documentary, short and student films from around the world.

Lake Michigan Film Competition

One attraction is the Lake Michigan Film Competition, which offers cash awards to filmmakers whose film was at least 1/4 shot, produced or financed in the states that border Lake Michigan: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin. The categories for the awards are Feature, Documentary, Short Film and Student Film. We are very pleased to offer the Message Makers Most Promising Student Filmmaker Award, a prize package worth $10,000.Once again, filmmakers from the Mid-Michigan area will come together to write, shoot, edit, and premiere an original five-minute production in a mere 48 hours. Participants will be given specified elements, such as a theme, prop, or line of dialogue at the start of the competition, and they must incorporate these elements into their finished film to be eligible for an award.

Discovering the Short

Discovering the Short shows a selection of short films from the 2006 East Lansing Film Festival appeared on WKAR-TV and was  produced by MSU students led by former student Randy Flick and faculty member Robert Albers of the MSU Department of Telecommunication, Information Studies, and Media.. The "short film" has long been the point of entry into the art of filmmaking and every year the East Lansing Film Festival offers aficionados a chance to view high quality short films made by professionals from all over the country.

Watch more of Discovering the Short on YouTube.

More Links...

ELFF 48/5 contest entries - filmmakers write, shoot, edit, and premiere an original five-minute production in a mere 48 hours.

Making the scenes: Local filmmakers race the clock for 48/5 - via Lansing City Pulse

For much more on the ELFF, check out elff.com, the ELFF MySpace Page, the ELFF on Flickr, the East Lansing Film Festival's B-Side Community. You may also be interested in MichiganFilm.org, a web site that highlights independent films from Michigan filmmakers and seeks to network those filmmakers and actors together.

More Michigan Film Festivals on Absolute Michigan's Michigan Film Festival Page.



Related Posts

This is program that compares articles on Absolute Michigan. Sometimes the results are a little odd.

3 Comments

  1. Absolute Michigan
    Posted March 9, 2008 at 2:17 pm | Permalink

    For more on the ELFF read 100 films, nine days East Lansing Film festival largest, most diverse in state in the Lansing Sate Journal

    Everything from Oscar nominees to award-winning documentaries highlight the schedule for the 11th annual East Lansing Film Festival, which begins Wednesday, March 12.

    The event, billed as "the largest and most diverse film festival in Michigan," continues through Thursday, March 20.

  2. Absolute Michigan
    Posted March 12, 2008 at 7:41 am | Permalink

    East Lansing Film Festival means it's a good time for film fans - from the HUB at lsj.com

    The East Lansing Film Festival kicks off today and the following article looks at the indie film genre including Michigan's own Bruce Campbell who will be screening his new film "My Name is Bruce".

    Back in 1981, some Michigan State University students and their friends brought fresh vigor to low-budget filmmaking.

    Plunging into a Tennessee woods, they had corn syrup, red dye, camera concoctions and imagination. They emerged with “Evil Dead” and fame.

    As the 11th annual East Lansing Film Festival opens tonight, that reflects one route for independent filmmakers.

    Campbell was at the core, when the indie-movie idea hit East Lansing. He starred in “Evil Dead” and its sequels, directed by his friend Sam Raimi.

    Raimi went on to make movies that have totaled billions at the box office. And Campbell? “I kind of have two different identities,” he said. He’s:

    • A Hollywood actor, going from “X-Files” to “Burn Notice” to Raimi’s
    “Spider-Man” films.

    • King of the B-movies. That brings him to town Thursday.

    Link

  3. Absolute Michigan
    Posted March 13, 2008 at 7:58 am | Permalink

    East Lansing Film Festival - via the Lansing City Pulse

    The 11th Annual East Lansing Film Festival gets underway tonight with a screening of “War/Dance,” an Oscar-nominated documentary about three children in war-torn Uganda. The critically acclaimed film was one of a handful ELFF executive director (and City Pulse movie critic) Susan Woods specifically sought out for this year’s fest. And although she got her other top picks too (“Paprika,” “Lars and the Real Girl,” “Jellyfish”), she says the most exciting thing is the number of great films she had never heard of before they were sent in for consideration. Woods says the quality of these unsolicited “cold submissions” has dramatically improved, which she sees as a sign that the festival is catching on beyond mid-Michigan.

    “They recognize the East Lansing Film Festival is a world-class event that has good audiences, good projection and is a good place for their film to be shown,” Woods says.

    This year’s submitted features include “Monster Camp,” “Darius Goes West, “Out Late,” “On Broadway,” “Les Paul: Chasing Sound” and “Blood Car.”

    In addition to showing more submitted films, the festival is also introducing family films and a special “midnight madness” showing. As usual, the festival also includes many issue-oriented films, covering the spectrum from mental health to predatory lending.

    “This film fest strikes me as being the most whole or complete that we’ve ever had,” Woods said. “All of [the films] complement each other and provide a complete event.”

    And from documentaries to fantasies, features to shorts and national to regional productions, our reviewers critiqued every festival entry we could get our hands on to offer you the most complete guide to the fest possible over these eight pages, complete with a full schedule of events.

    So enough with the previews, it’s time for the feature presentation.

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *
*
*