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wewerehere-poster

2011 | USA | 90 min.

DIRECTOR David Weissman
PRODUCERS David Weissman
EDITOR/CO-DIRECTOR Bill Weber
CINEMATOGRAPHY Marsha Kahm
MUSIC Holcombe Waller


“In the U.S., the AIDS pandemic struck San Francisco first and hardest. We Were Here, David Weissman and Bill Weber’s brisk, tender, multifaceted, and deeply moving documentary, tells the story of the AIDS crisis through the voices of four gay men … and one woman, all of whom pitched in—for years—to help the sick and the dying because, as the movie makes clear, the circumstances made it unthinkable for them to do otherwise. They and their comrades are the equivalent of World War II resistance fighters, and the film gives their commitment and courage the celebration it deserves…. simply the most compelling history of the major tragedy and epic struggle of our time.”

— Amy Taubin, Film Comment


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ABOUT THE FILM:
WE WERE HERE is the first documentary to take a deep and reflective look back at the arrival and impact of AIDS in San Francisco. It explores how the City’s inhabitants were affected by, and how they responded to, that calamitous epidemic. Though a San Francisco-based story, WE WERE HERE extends beyond San Francisco and beyond AIDS itself. It speaks to our capacity as individuals to rise to the occasion, and to the incredible power of a community coming together with love, compassion, and determination.

Click here to WATCH THE TRAILER, and for more information about this film.


WEBSITE:
wewereherefilm.com

Read what the New York Times had so say: Jesse McKinley article and Stephen Holden review.




We Were Here makes indieWIRE’s fall “The 30 Must-See Indie’s List

“Clear-eyed, soulful”

— Kenneth Turan,
Los Angeles Times

“Of all the cinematic explorations of the AIDS crisis, not one is more heartbreaking and inspiring.”

— Stephen Holden,
The New York Times


“One of the standout films at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival.”

— Peter Knegt, indieWIRE


Please come out and support
WE WERE HERE

Opens Sept. 9 in New York at the Angelika Film Center and the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center at Lincoln Center.

Opens Sept. 16 at the ArcLight Cinemas Hollywood in Los Angeles.

Click here for the full release schedule.








weekend-poster

2011 | UK | 96 min.

WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY Andrew Haigh
PRODUCERS Tristan Goligher
CINEMATOGRAPHY Ula Pontikos

AWARDS
2011 SXSW “Emerging Visions” Audience Award
Outfest 2011 Grand Jury Award for Outstanding International Dramatic Feature


“WEEKEND depicts a fleeting romantic encounter with delicacy and philosophical depth, but its chief appeal is simplicity. Revolving around a brief affair between two young men with vastly different perspectives on life, the film operates on a familiar dynamic; however, it works here thanks to the precise alignment of talented actors and a focused screenplay. Humming along on the commitment of its engaging leads, WEEKEND builds into a powerful encapsulation of an identity crisis over the course of three passionate days.”

—Eric Kohn, IndieWIRE

“If every movie is as great as WEEKEND, it’s going to be a terrific fest.”

—Eugene Hernandez, indieWIRE

“A small, perfect thing. A likely classic and not just a gay one.”

—Chuck Wilson, LA Weekly



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ABOUT THE FILM:
On a Friday night after hanging out with his straight mates, Russell heads out to a nightclub, alone and on the pull. Just before closing, he meets Glen. And so begins a weekend—in bars and bedrooms, getting drunk and taking drugs, telling stories and having s-ex—that will resonate throughout their lives.
Click here to WATCH THE TRAILER, and for more information about this film.


WEBSITE:
weekend-film.com



Weekend is No. 10 on indieWIRE’s fall “The 30 Must-See Indie’s List

“Perfectly realised—a bracing, present tense exploration of s-ex, intimacy and love.”

—A.O. Scott, The New York Times

“Fall theatrical preview: Must see movies.”

—Mark Rabinowitz, CNN.com

“WEEKEND is a work of surpassing emotional insight and artistic accomplishment. It’s about (yes) the human condition — and it’s already one of the best of the year.”

—Paul Brunick, Film Comment

“The film takes an approach similar to Richard Linklater’s Before Sunrise…Haigh directs the film with carefully composed shots that allow the actors to naturally drift in and out of frame, giving the duo’s frank dialogue and unrestrained s-ex scenes a powerful and raw expression. Weekend pulls off what so many try and few achieve: an honest relationship.”

Matt Patches, Cinema Blend





Please come out and support
WEEKEND

Opens Sept. 23 in New York at the IFC Film Center.

Opens Sept. 30 at Laemmle Theatres in Los Angeles.

Cable VOD begins Sept. 30.

Click here for a theatrical engagement near you.








shutuplittleman-poster

2011 | Australia | 90 min.

DIRECTOR Matthew Bate
WRITER Matthew Bate
PRODUCERS Sophie Hyde



ABOUT THE FILM:

When two friends tape-recorded the fights of their violently noisy neighbors, they accidentally created one of the world’s first ‘viral’ pop-culture sensations. In 1987, Eddie and Mitch, two young punks from the Midwest, moved into a low-rent shithole of an apartment in the Lower Haight district of San Francisco. Through paper-thin walls, they were informally introduced to their middle-aged alcoholic neighbors, Raymond Huffman, a raging homophobe, and Peter Haskett, a flamboyant gay man. Night after night, the boys were treated to and terrorized by a seemingly endless stream of vodka-fueled altercations between the two unlikely roommates. Oftentimes nonsensical and always vitriolic, the diatribes of Peter and Ray were an audio goldmine just begging to be recorded and passed around on the underground tape market. For 18 months, Eddie and Mitch hung a microphone from their kitchen window to chronicle the bizarre and violent relationship between their borderline-insane neighbors. SHUT UP LITTLE MAN! AN AUDIO MISADVENTURE is a darkly hilarious modern fable.

Click here to WATCH THE TRAILER, and for more information about this film.

WEBSITE:
ShutUpLittleManFilm.com








Please come out and support
SHUT UP LITTLE MAN!

Opens Sept. 16 in New York at the IFC Film Center and in Los Angeles at Laemmle's Sunset 5.

For additional theatrical and VOD info, click here.








somethingsgonnalive-poster

2009 | USA | 80 min.

DIRECTOR, WRITER & PRODUCER Daniel Raim
PRODUCERS Gerald Chamales, Jennifer Raim












ABOUT THE FILM:
The Los Angeles Times Critics’ Pick "SOMETHING'S GONNA LIVE" is an intimate portrait of life, death, friendship and the movies, as recalled by some of Hollywood's greatest cinema artists. AFI alum Daniel Raim captures the late-life gathering of renowned art directors (and pals) Robert "Bob" Boyle (NORTH BY NORTHWEST, THE BIRDS), Henry "Bummy" Bumstead (TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, THE STING) and Albert Nozaki (THE WAR OF THE WORLDS, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS); storyboard artist Harold Michelson (THE GRADUATE); and master cinematographers Haskell Wexler (WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?) and Conrad Hall (IN COLD BLOOD).

Followed by: THE MAN ON LINCOLN’S NOSE, Daniel Raim's Oscar®-nominated short documentary profiling legendary art director and production designer Robert “Bob” Boyle.


Click here to WATCH THE TRAILER, and for more information about this film.

WEBSITE:
somethingsgonnalive.com


Please come out and support
SOMETHING’S GONNA LIVE

Sept. 9-11 in Silver Spring, MD in the Washington DC area at the AFI Silver Theatre.








Please support our filmmakers by attending one or more of these films during their opening weekend!

All best,

The FIlm Collaborative

tfcdotorg