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Jamie Cobb

SSFF – The Third Screening

SO screening 3 went really well. It was a bigger audience then screening 2 and the crowd had more energy than night 2, even before the lights went out. And while we were not interrupted by distracting latecomers this time, there were all new distractions. I was sitting next to stinky, crunchy, sandwich guy with a paper bag that he liked to loudly crinkle for an obscene amount of time. Then there was really loud, shouldn’t be allowed to leave the house with whatever virus he has hacking guy, and lastly there was loud annoying 80’s cell phone ring girl, who let most of the ring play before finally getting it during the quiet ending of the film. Ohhh audience, where do you guys come from?

The Q and A went great. The audience had many questions for Zak, and the more he answered and they liked what they heard, the more they asked. The only really negative feed back/ question that he received was, “why did you make this 9 mins? There’s nothing you can do with a 9 min short.” Which I was kind of taken aback by. I think there is a lot you can do with a 9 min short, a lot more than you could do with the painful “40 min short” we saw they day before anyway.

The best part of the Q and A were 2 older ladies that had to be 65+. When they sat down before the movie I was thinking they are definitely not the IFHY target audience, watch them walk out during IFHY and come back for the film that followed. But it turns out they were only there for IFHY, and one of these older ladies really liked it, I mean REALLY liked it. After all of Zak’s responses she would loudly respond with a positive yes, or ohhh, and when she left before the next film played, she thanked Zak profusely and told him how much she liked it again.

I’m sorry to say that I had never seen Dogme #1 “The Celebration” before, but I thought that it was an amazing film. And it actually gave me a new level of insight into IFHY, so despite the different subject matter, I thought it was the perfect pairing.

So all in all, southside was a great experience for me to see how festivals work, meet some great people, and to see the audience reaction and feedback that Zak received. It was a great trip and I’m sorry to say we have to go back to reality tomorrow.

The Second Screening at SouthSide

IFHY screening 2 of 3 was definitely a different experience than the first screening. There was maybe a forth of the people in the audience, and the short wasn’t playing in a block and didn’t have an opening act. So the title card went up cold and you could feel the shock in the room. I saw the guy in front of me silent chuckle during the patio scene, and one guy did a loud laugh mid patio, but other than that all you could hear were the late comers distractedly walking in to find a seat, and one older couple who came in with a flash light to find seats. Of course by the time John picked up his guitar the 50+ audience was definitely feeling Ron’s pain. Screening 2 got me to thinking, IFHY is not a comedy, so why am I trying to measure the audience reaction to the short by their laughter? Any thoughts on this?

Then we went to watch the Experimental block of short films. I gotta tell you this was rough. Experimental is not for me. And there was one “40 min short” that pushed my patience to the limit. There was a lot of fidgeting, yawns, and glances at the program during this one. And not just from me, but the whole audience. Perhaps that should become my new audience reaction gauge?

And finally we saw the Comedy/Mumblecore block of short films,and it was a much needed source of lighter fare after the experimental experience. And a few a of the filmmakers were there for a Q and A. Perhaps it was just nerves, but it felt to me that apathy is the new cool? So it was hard to get any info from this.

All in all it was an interesting day. I really enjoyed getting to see what other filmmakers are up to, and getting to feel the festival vibe. Screening 3 and Zak’s Q and A are coming up on saturday…