Tag: directed by women
Welcome to Day Seven of the 7th Femme Filmmakers Festival
I’m fairly certain there are no films made by God or Bergman in today line-ups so don’t be fooled by the feature film titles on…
FemmeFilmFest7 Interview: Planet Prescription Creator Dayna Reggero Speaks to Filmotomy
Dayna Reggero is a passionate and infectious soul. Her documentaries and projects outside of film show a genuine concern for the human beings and the…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: Two Eggs, Scrambled (Melissa Dimetres)
The tinkle of a piano and the tedium plastered across our heroine’s face goes a long way to tell us something about the state of…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: Fanmi (Sandrine Brodeur-Desrosiers, Carmine Pierre-Dufour)
Fanmi is a quietly devastating film, revolving around a recognisable mother-daughter relationship. As the daughter, Martine endures the trappings of her own mind, and an…
Welcome to Day Six of the 7th Femme Filmmakers Festival
There is an echo of the beginning and the end of things with the short films on display as we hurtle into Day Six of…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: Felkészülés meghatározatlan ideig tartó együttlétre // Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time (Lili Horvát)
“We are fools in love,” Jane Austen famously wrote in her novel Pride and Prejudice. This statement can easily be confirmed by whoever has had…
Welcome to Day Five of the 7th Femme Filmmakers Festival
As we approach the half time whistle, expect some bombardment of activity as we look to recap and promote further what has gone so far….
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: មុនដំបូងខ្មែរក្រហមសម្លាប់ប៉ារបស់ខ្ញុំ // First They Killed My Father (Angelina Jolie)
In a dense forest, a young Cambodian girl coaxes a tarantula from the trees, its furry legs gingerly creeping along the trunk. Does she mean…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: The Mirror (Giulia Achenza)
From the opening second of this less-than-three-minute short film I recognised the music playing over the already eye-catching images as deftly similar to that of…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: Lune / Moon (Zoé Pelchat)
Joanie Martel gives a beautiful and nuanced performance as Babz, a “lonely but endearing ex convict” in Zoe Pelchat’s Lune. When we meet Babz, she’s…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: All This Panic (Jenny Gage)
Now, I’m no teenage girl. Never have been. But stories on film about adolescent girls is a fairly common thread. And a soaring trend, the…
Welcome to Day Three of the 7th Femme Filmmakers Festival
Knock knock. Who’s there? Date. Date who? No, no, no, it’s Day Three not Day Two. Some very vivid images for your eyes today covering…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: Moxie (Amy Poehler)
While feminism has grown over the decades, a newer concept being fully realized and defined is girl power. The adolescent experience for girls can be…
FemmeFilmFest7 Review: Heroines (Katia Badalian)
Heroines lures its audience into a false sense of security, a false sense of comedy perhaps. Anna Khaja’s Regina bursts to life in the first…