by Nathaniel R
This is the first year The Film Experience has covered the HollyShorts Film Festival. We intended to do more but you know how it is with time. It flies! For the final piece, I thought I'd review a few of the winners. The Complete Winners List from the festival is presented in alphabetical order with capsule reviews of three Oscar qualifiers and a few more for good measure...
Best Action: Twin Turbo by Caity Lotz
Reviewed previously by Ben
Best Animation (Oscar-Qualifying Category): o28 from Otalia Caussé, Geoffroy Collin, Lousie Grardel, Antoine Marchand, Robin Merle, and Fabian Meyran
Can't say that I'm a big fan of this slapstick short in which a tourist couple, an old woman, and a baby get stuck in a driverless street car that becomes a rollercoaster of sorts once it goes off the rails. To be fair there are a few good sight gags and nice through-line touches (flash photography, a Lisbon postcard, a rolling orange, and a projectile pacifier) but the annoying tourist characters are stock and the cumulative effect is more mildly amusing diversion than hilarious slapstick classic. C+
Best Cinematography: Kai Dickson for Eyes of Eidolon
Best Comedy: Basic by Chelsea Devantez
Very short at three minutes with one basic joke -- social media makes people envious and crazy -- embedded in a woman's narrated journey through another woman's super-cliched instagram. Until... well, it's a short film and you know how they like to twist for the punchline. Fun! B
Best Commercial: Lyon E-Sport by Gaetano Naccarato
Best Director: Karishma Dube for BITTU
Best Drama: November 1st by Charlie Manton
Best Documentary: USA vs. Scott by Ora DeKornfeld and Isabel Castro
Best Editing: Stella Heath Keir for End-O
Best Female Short Screenplay: Hello I Must Be Going written by Sara Hallowell
Best Horror: The Fourth Wall by Kelsey Bollig
Best International: Alive by Jimmy Olsson
Best LGBTQ+: Query By Sophie Kargman
We're suckers for shorts like this that give you just a wee slice of someone's day with some provocative central question. This short is about best friends and roommates, one bi and one straight who have an on and off all day conversation about sexual norms and then decide to kiss to test their theory. There's even a completely random Armie Hammer cameo. A=
Best Live Action (Oscar-Qualifying Category): Welcome Back by Tiffany Kontoyiannis
This short is of the tough tear-stained message variety. We follow a desperate mother and her confused daughter as they are deported back to Venezuela, where the mother is wanted by the oppressive government for organizing protests. An effective message picture. Bonus points for the brief tonal variety of the protagonists sister who practically stepped out of an Almodóvar picture. B
Best Midnight Madness: Inferno by Bishal Dutta
As Ben mentioned in his action short roundup some shorts feel more like audition pieces than films. Such is the case with this one which drops you into a pitch black hotel room without context as a sweaty desperate woman struggles to survive... what exactly? Lots of horror movie aesthetics and though it avoids crass jump scares it almost goes there often. As an audition reel showing the ability to create an atmosphere of dread and hysteria, it works. But there's zero in the way of context or even short film "twists" once it gets going, even in its last weirdly calm nightmare shot. Then again, horror is not my bag as I've often confessed. C+
Best Music Video: Adventure by Monster Rally, directed by Zak Marx
Best Producer: Julia Retali for Aio Zitelli
Reviewed previously by Ben
Best SAGIndie Award: Sunday’s Child by Maisie Richardson-Sellers
Best Sci-Fi: Hekademia by Gloria Mercer
Best Student: A Beautiful Nightmare by Kevin Lee Maxwell
Best Television Pilot: Small Fry Pilot ‘Six Pack’ written by Madeline Mack, Michael Lincoln
Best Thriller: An Uninvited Guest by Richard B. Pierre
Best TV: The World Between Us by ChunYang Lin
Best VFX: Automaton by Krzysztof Rost
So abstract it's esssentially a VFX reel. Nevertheless I was mesmerized for its 4 minutes, never quite sure what I was looking at beyond the opening shot of a grass field and a thunderstorm morphing into something like an inferno and then underwater formations? explosions? Molecules? Erosion? What am I seeing? Slight of substance but weirdly hypnotic. B+
Best Web Series: All-American Sex Offender by Chloe Lenihan
Festival Honorable Mention: Nahjum by Sebastian Torres Greene & Manuel Del Valle
Grand Prix (Oscar-Qualifying Category): 1, 2, 3 All Eyes On Me by Emil Gallardo
Harrowing gun violence in our schools is a frequent nightmare-fuel filmmaking subject. But Gallardo's 15 minute short is a well-judged and strong addition to this tragic subgenre. It helps that the violence is off-screen, though the sound design still makes this a horror film. Farelle Walker anchors the short with a completely natural turn as a resourceful elementary school teacher struggling to save her entire class as she waits for help. Her classroom mantra transforms from playful calll and response to a scary lifeline jolt in this gripping short. (It's easy to see this one as a future Oscar finalist or nominee) A
Indie Maverick Award: Justin Simien
Screenplay 1st Place Grand Prize Winner: The Problem With Time Travel written by Mike Kearby
Screenplay 2nd Place: Christopher and the Bug written by Vanessa Esteves
Screenplay 3rd Place: Rice written by Omar Kamara
Shot on Film Award presented by Kodak: Birthday Girl by Portia A. Buckley
Shot on Film Honorable Mention presented by Kodak: David by Zach Woods
Shot On Film Super 8 Winner presented by Kodak: "World Premiere Video" - The Music Video that survived after Music Television didn't by Mike J. Nichols
A biographical doc short about a guy who fantasized about being on MTV as a teenager and discovered his lost video (with a cameo from MTV's own Dweezil Zappa) recording in the 80s recently while helping out another filmmaker on that recent Frank Zappa documentary feature. Cute and 80s nostalgia friendly, especially for MTV originalists (Oh, and this filmmaker is not that Mike Nichols obviously) B (B+ if you're over 40)
Social Impact Award: Black Boys Can’t Cry by Victor Gabriel
Special Jury Award: The Van by Erenik Beqiri
Women in Film Award: The Birth of Valerie Venus by Sarah Clift