
Discovering The Magic In New Faces New Voices Film Festival: Highlighting Diversity In Filmmakers
The 5th annual New Faces New Voices Film Festival brought a focus on diversity in independent filmmaking, with emphasis on women and BIPOC filmmakers.
The 5th annual New Faces New Voices Film Festival brought a focus on diversity in independent filmmaking, with emphasis on women and BIPOC filmmakers.
Female Voices Rock hosted their annual film festival that upholds womxn filmmakers’ voices and creative work. Highlights included films from winners of NALIP's Women of Color Incubator presented by Netflix and Spike Lee's Film Production Fund.
Female Voices Rock (FVR) is an NYC-based organization that hosts events to champion women’s voices and creativity. From Friday May 5th through Sunday May 7th, FVR is hosting a film festival in Brooklyn that focuses on women filmmakers. Founder Catherine Delaloye explains what makes FVR powerful.
Katra Film Series presents the red carpet premiere of acclaimed international filmmaker Daniel Diosdado’s American debut feature, "The Nomad," at Regal Cinemas.
Katra Film Series hosts its fifth annual Bowery Film Festival featuring ten films across four days ending with a block of music videos and an after-party at The Bowery Electric.
The New York Film Festival's 60th anniversary brought a slate of great films from Martin Scorsese, Noah Baumbach, Park Chan-wook, Maria Schrader, Claire Denis and many more. Here's the Honeysuckle Hot List for the best of the fest.
Filmmakers from around the world submitted their short and feature films to be shown at Katra Film Series' 11th season.
This June, Regal Cinemas in Times Square hosted the Katra Film Series Summer Festival for its eleventh season of independent cinema. Katra champions “the next generation of diverse, inclusive, and multicultural filmmakers and content creators from around the world”.
After a two-year hiatus, the Nitehawk Shorts Festival returned to celebrate independent filmmaking. Its closing night showcased a lineup featuring young women navigating their worlds and people chasing their heart’s desire.
Year three of the film festival highlighting women, BIPOC and LGBTQ+ filmmakers was a testament to New York City’s post-pandemic comeback.
The film uses ironic humor to critique the disproportionate ways people of color suffer from the distribution and consumption of cannabis.
Female empowerment is a big theme in almost all films that were showing that night.
The organization chose to wrap this dialogue in the theme of “Emergence.”
The women live in the fracking boomtown of Little Woods, North Dakota, a small, economically-depressed area where they have few options and no hope.