CineVic presents the 12th annual Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival
2-5 May 2024
37 short films in 6 screening programs over 4 days
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Curated selections from regions around the Pacific Ocean including Vancouver Island, New Zealand, Taiwan, Colombia, Korea, California, British Columbia, and more
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Workshop, panel, and networking opportunities for filmmakers and audiences
Trailer
Land Acknowledgement
CineVic acknowledges and respects the long and continuing history of the Lək̓ʷəŋən-speaking people, now known as the Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations, on whose traditional and unceded territory we carry out our activities.
Awards
🔼 Click above to watch the awards reel 🔼
Announcing our award winners from the 2024 Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival:
Outstanding International Film
Fish Bowl
Outstanding BC Film
Məca
Outstanding Documentary Film
Ancestral Threads
Outstanding Animated Film
Məca
Outstanding Directing
I Can’t Go On
Outstanding Cinematography
I Can’t Go On
Outstanding Art Direction
Cloud Striker
Outstanding Screenplay
I Can’t Go On
Outstanding Sound
Mooncake
Outstanding Music
Tank Fairy
Outstanding Editing
Tank Fairy
Outstanding Performance
Fish Bowl – Rachel Sweeney
Festival Program
Thursday May 2nd 2024
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Thursday May 2nd 2024
6:00pm-8:00pm
The Sticky Wicket - Clubhouse Room
919 Douglas St.
*Enter off Courtney St.*
Free admission
19+
Join us for some schmoozing to kickstart the 2024 festival
- Come for the community, stay for the snacks. First drink is on us!
- Preview some of this year's official selections with a short screening of trailers around 7:00pm.
- Then we'll jaunt across the street to The Vic Theatre for our opening night screening of local short films starting at 8:30pm.
- We know there is a FactualWEST Pub Night at the same time -- so why not go to both parties? The island film scene is abuzz, don't miss out!
Ratin.
Thursday May 2nd 2024
8:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
$13
19+
Rating:
🎟️ Get Tickets 🎟️
This year's Short Circuit opens with a hometown screening of six local short films from the Victoria area, showcasing the diversity of filmmakers living in our region and working in a variety of genres: drama, thriller, comedy, music, animation, experimental, dance, and even a touch of magic realism.
They Found Us
Victoria / Mayne Island • 14 mins. • Johnny Aitken
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Through gripping cloaked performance, They Found Us explores the immense impact the Canadian Residential School System had on many Indigenous people. This is the first of three films created in partnership between SNAFU Society of Unexpected Spectacles and incarcerated artists at William Head On Stage.
Elder Johnny Aitken, he/him identifies as a queer 2Spirit with Coast Salish, Haida and Scottish lineage. He considers himself “mixed up” in a beautiful way and sees this blood mixture as a gift and sometimes a troublesome curse. Johnny’s blood combination allows him to imagine and create through the lens of blended cultures.
The Cameraman - Chapter 2
Victoria / Vancouver • 17 mins. • Connor Gaston, Vaughn Gaston
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Two teenage brothers get tested for Huntington's Disease while struggling to reconcile different worldviews on their potential illness, the future, and what living a meaningful life entails.
Connor Gaston is an award-winning filmmaker whose work has screened at film festivals around the world, including the Toronto International Film Festival. In 2016, Gaston completed his first feature film The Devout which earned 5 Leo Awards including Best Picture, the BC Emerging Filmmaker Award at the Vancouver International Film Festival, and a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best First Feature. He is a recent alum of Norman Jewison’s Canadian Film Centre, the TIFF Talent Lab and Writers’ Lab, and the Kyoto Filmmakers’ Lab. He is currently in development on his second feature film.
A Beautiful Peace
Victoria • 13 mins. • Mia Golden
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Family and friends attending a memorial of a loved one are forever changed when the elderly patriarch sends out a message for the world to hear.
Mia Golden is a Jamaican born, Canadian filmmaker. Golden has written, directed and produced a variety of film projects including short narratives, feature films, and documentaries. She currently has one feature documentary in post-production, one feature dramatic narrative in development, a pilot, and another feature documentary in development.
Moonstruck in the Garden of Elements
Victoria • 6 minutes • Shelley McIntosh
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Joan Miró’s ‘Harlequin’s Carnival’ and the music of Captain Matchbox Whoopee Band combine to inspire elements of sentience and music instigating attractions in the moonlight.
In 1978, Shelley McIntosh graduated at Vancouver School of Art (now Emily Carr University) with animated film Labyrinth which won 1st prize (First Film category) at Ottawa International Animation Festival that year. McIntosh has spent many years in the animation industry in Vancouver, Toronto, and London UK. Moonstruck is her first time screening at Short Circuit.
Wormies
Victoria • 20 mins. • Octavian Kaul
*Filmmaker in attendance*
In 1980s suburbia, a distant family is forced to come together when the Summer’s hottest new toy, a cute aquatic pet, mutates into a repulsive monster.
Octavian Kaul is a 19-year-old filmmaker, actor and pioneer of worm-adjacent-cinema from Victoria BC. Since kindergarten, Octavian has been obsessed with genre cinema, and in the past few years, he's written, directed, and edited short films that have been screened and awarded at festivals around the world.
Cream
Victoria • 4 mins. • Kenny Heintz, Mark Hoyne
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Ellen persuades Buck to overcome his fear of dairy; he succumbs to the irresistible temptation and surrenders his body to the delectable world of Cream.
Kenny Heintz and Mark Hoyne, two aspiring filmmakers, have embarked on a collaborative journey. Despite limited resources, they consistently deliver high-budget quality productions. With their unwavering ambition and a drive to create engaging and entertaining experiences, Kenny and Mark are proud to bring Cream to the screen.
Friday May 3rd 2024
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Friday May 3rd 2024
6:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
$13
19+
Rating:
🎟️ Get Tickets 🎟️
Five films that embody the difficulty of letting go. Though the trajectory of humanity does bend, the line remains a tether to all things past, present, and future.
The Ornament
Vancouver • 15 mins. • Jinjara Mitchell
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A seemingly innocent holiday homework assignment transforms into a heart-wrenching test for 9-year-old Tessa, forcing her to confront the ultimate decision: disclose the painful truth about her abusive mother or continue to perpetuate the lies she's expected to tell.
As a current member of the prestigious Women In The Director's Chair CAM Program, writer-director and actor Jinjara Mitchell has spent the last decade crafting a diverse and compelling career in Film and Television. The Ornament is Jinjara's debut short film, and she currently has several other projects in development, including her first feature film Last Summer and a television series titled All That Glitters. By drawing from her own unconventional experiences, Jinjara has discovered a profound voice that explores complex social and gender themes. Her goal is to fearlessly share stories that might be difficult to speak about and use her creativity to inspire others to do the same.
Astonishing Little Feet
California • 9 mins. • Meagan A. Houang
Afong Moy, the first documented Chinese woman to come to the United States, realizes the men who separated her from her family only have interest in profiting off the peculiarities of her bound feet.
Maegan Houang is a writer/director who has written on shows such as Counterpart (Starz), Shogun (FX) and The Sympathizer (HBO). She recently wrote Panos Cosmatos' (Mandy) next feature Nekrokosm and is developing an original TV show with A24. Her short film In Full Bloom premiered on Short of the Week and she has also directed music videos for artists such as Mitski, Hana Vu, Vagabon and Charly Bliss. In 2023, she was featured in Filmmaker Mag's 25 New Faces of Independent Film.
Fish Bowl
California • 18 mins. • Rachel Sweeney
Zoe, bride and soon-to-be mother, has a miscarriage at her own rehearsal dinner. When her attempts to hide her miscarriage and shame go completely awry, she finds a way to overcome her guilt and grief - by stealing a dying fish.
Rachel Sweeney is a Los Angeles-based writer, director, producer, and former vanlifer. Between gigs selling chocolate pumpkins to Barbara Walters, coaching soccer, customer service at an evil tech start-up, and writing kids’ YouTube cartoons, she cut her teeth as a film director, making low-budget comedy sketches with friends from the improv and stand-up comedy communities. Cheers premiered at Boston’s Women in Comedy Festival and several other shorts have been featured on Huffington Post and WhoHaha. Dead Girl was an official selection of Female Voices Rock, Oxford, Oaxaca, and the Art of Brooklyn Film Festivals. Fish Bowl has screened at Sun Valley Film Festival, LA International Shorts Festival, and Whistler Film Festival.
Swallow Flying to the South
China/Vancouver • 17 mins. • Mochi Lin
Spring 1976, 5-year-old Swallow is abandoned at a public boarding preschool in central Beijing. When the persimmons are ripe, Swallow masters how to cry, but doesn't forget how to fly.
Mochi Lin is a director, animator, pianist, and composer, who recently graduated with a BFA in Film and Animation from Rhode Island School of Design. She also concentrated in History Philosophy and Social Sciences and studied Music at Brown University.
Puppet Story
Korea • 14 mins. • Park Se-hong
A story of animator Park Se-hong and his stop motion puppets: Fairy, Woodcutter, and Monster.
Park Se-hong was born in 1973 in Seoul, South Korea and currently works at Movingdoll studio making puppet animation.
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Friday May 3rd 2024
8:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
$13
19+
Rating:with one film
🎟️ Get Tickets 🎟️
Sometimes it feels like life’s outcomes are expected, but cinema always confirms that the unexpected is what makes life worth living. Enjoy a sundry screening of quirkiness, miscellany, and discontent - you won’t be left unbothered by these genre-bending films.
Immaculate Virtual
Roberts Creek BC • 8 mins. • Ryley O'Byrne
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A film essay contemplating the nature of reality, intimacy, and loss in the bewildering space where technology and humanity entwine.
Ryley O’Byrne is an artist and writer from xwesam, the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territories of the Coast Salish peoples (Roberts Creek, Canada). Her practice encompasses text, image, video, costume, and sculpture.
Mooncake
California • 11 mins. • Rraine Hanson
Closed captioning & described video are available for this film
An experimental meditation on gender queerness and the blurred lines between influence, desire and obsession.
Rraine Hanson is a Jamaican transdiciplinary artist, most interested in utilizing design and mixed media to tell stories centering the experiences and imaginations of queer and trans people of colour. Their visual style is heavily informed by surrealism and the aesthetics of their Caribbean upbringing and is always seeking to answer the question: what can be found in the crevice between our dreams and our memories? They were awarded the 2020 Barbara Hammer Lesbian Experimental Filmmaking Grant for their short film Mooncake, which premiered at e-flux in New York City and has since screened at film festivals across the globe.
The Dog - A Rapidly Condensed Guide to Treading Water
Vancouver • 14 mins. • Michael Makaroff
*Filmmaker in attendance*
An underwriter recounts his career in body part insurance sales in an attempt to affirm his life choices.
Michael Makaroff has a busy track record of directing music videos with credits including Grammy and Juno award-winning/nominated artists, as well as receiving awards for his narrative short films. Recently, he hosted his first solo art exhibit for his 2022 Video Art series titled Fitting In Places.
Find Where I Belong
New Zealand / Aotearoa • 14 mins. • Kahu Kaiha
Living unhoused in New Zealand, the friendship of carefree John and young Elvis is upended by Elvis’ dreams of returning to his Marquesas Islands home.
Kahu Kaiha is a Marquesan indigenous multi-disciplinary artist: Director, Producer, Screenwriter, Actor, Marquesan Haka Choreographer and Marquesan Haka music composer. Kahu's directorial debut short film Find Where I Belong was a self/crowd funded project which won Best Fiction Short Film at the FIFO film festival. Other achievements include directing and producing several videos of Te Henua ‘Enana for Tikilounge Productions and working as a fixer for Scottie Productions and Greenstone Origins Season 2.
Currently he is in pre-production for his next short film Küī and his feature documentary debut KAKAIA.
Do Digital Curanderas Use Eggs In Their Limpias?
California • 14 mins. • Roberto Fatal
A struggling Latinx healer considers abandoning the physical world for promises of a digital utopia.
Roberto Fatal is a filmmaker and storyteller from Rarámuri, Tewa Pueblo, Ute, and Spanish ancestors and Mexican-American culture. Their Queer, gender fluid, Mestize/Mixed identity informs the sci-fi, apocalyptic films they make. Their work centers on humans who sit at the intersections of time, space and culture. From this unique vantage point, these characters can bridge divides, see all sides, find new paths forward and recall multiple histories long forgotten. Fatal is a Sundance Indigenous Film Fellow and an Imagine Native Director's Lab feature film fellow. Their debut feature script ELECTRIC HOMIES was selected by GLAAD x The Black List as one of the best unproduced screenplays of 2022.
I Can't Go On
White Rock BC • 12 mins. • Brenna Goodwin-McCabe
*Filmmaker in attendance*
An alienated young woman discovers a body in her apartment elevator, left to fester under the heels of her unconcerned neighbours.
Brenna Goodwin-McCabe is a filmmaker from Vancouver, interested in Gothic horror and adaptation. She established Hearth Pictures with her short films Half Full and The Still, before Writing, Directing, and Executive Producing the surreal horror short I Can’t Go On with Vancouver’s Crazy8s filmmaking challenge.
Saturday May 4th 2024
SAFETY & SURVIVAL PANEL
Saturday May 4th 2024
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
FREE Admission
CineVic presents our biggest and boldest filmmaking panel ever, with eight speakers discussing their own experiences and answering questions to help you foster healthy, equitable, and respectful environments on both industry and indie productions.
We are already well into the 21st-century, and the motion picture medium is approaching its sesquicentennial (that's 150 years). It's time to turn baby steps into longer strides as new concepts, departments, and job titles are quickly becoming essential line items on movie budgets and call sheets. Film production models have come a long way in efficiency and technological achievement -- but the advent of AI is a timely reminder that we must not neglect the human impacts in all aspects of our work as collaborative artists.
ARNOLD LIM
Moderator
Arnold Lim is an Independent director and producer who won Telefilm’s Talent to Watch grant twice with past awards & grants from the BC Arts Council, Canada Council for the Arts, BravoFACT and the Harold Greenberg Fund. He recently won the Director’s Guild of Canada’s Greenlight award and was selected to the National Screen Institute’s Features First program and hails from Victoria BC.
JOHNNY AITKEN
Indigenous cultural safety and engagement on film and art projects
Elder Johnny Aitken, Cowichan Tribes, Comiaken Nation is an inter-disciplinary 2Spirit artist living on Mayne Island BC. Johnny is guided by the term, Fumbling Towards Reconciliation. For Johnny this means that no one has a clear path to truth, healing, and reconciliation. We all are fumbling and that is okay! We are all Treaty people who need to learn to work together to create a more equitable society. Johnny will expand on this notion when he discusses what this means to him when it comes to cultural safety and creating safe spaces.
KATHLEEN JOHNSON
Why your indie script needs a Sensitivity Reader
Kathleen Johnson is CEO of Kreativ Culture Strategies based in the Victoria/Vancouver area that provides Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Anti-Racism training to organizations. She earned a degree in Sociology and Anthropology from Carleton University and a certificate in DEI from Cornell University. She is also an executive leadership and group coach with certification from Certified Coaches Federation and Values Inspired Coaching. Kathleen has worked with companies such as Bank of America, Desjardins Insurance, Fidusure Financial, the Town of East Gwillimbury, national non-profits, and federal governmental agencies. She has a background in Film and TV working on such productions as Beauty and the Beast, Suits, Umbrella Academy, and Suicide Squad. She volunteers as board chair of Odihi Foundation that helps women and girls of colour with overall wellness, getting into boardroom positions, and entrepreneurship.
CHEN WANG
Cultural traditions and protocols on a recent local student production
Chen Wang was born in Mainland China and moved to Victoria in 2013. He has worked on countless local film productions and is currently working on his PhD focusing on migration history and documentary films, while also teaching film courses at the University of Victoria. As a director, cinematographer, and writer, Chen has worked on over 60 commercials, music
videos, documentaries, shorts, and feature films which have screened at festivals internationally.
NICOLLE NATTRASS
Safe spaces, self care, and mental wellness on set
Nicolle Nattrass is grateful to live, work and create on the unceded and ancestral territory of the Snaw’na’as First Nations people. She is an advocate for mental wellness, psychological safety & bringing care & professionalism to the arts & entertainment industry. She is a counselor (CAC II), trauma informed consultant and facilitator. Holding space for artists, whether as a dramaturge, director or coach, is grounded in trauma-informed, heart centred and ethical practice. Helping others and offering tools for increased creative self care and mental wellness has been the key to her work as a coach and counselor, navigating difficult conversations and topics like trauma, anxiety and substance misuse. Her professional expertise unites two careers, 25+ years of experience working in the performing arts as a Jessie nominated theatre/film/tv actor (CAEA/UBCP/ACTRA), playwright (PGC), director and dramaturge as well as a career working front line as an Addiction Counselor (CAC II) and trauma-informed consultant specializing in mental wellness, coaching and creative self care practices.
MEGAN WONG
Why your indie production needs an Intimacy Coordinator
Megan Wong (she/they) is a queer, neurodivergent, Chinese-Canadian Intimacy Professional working primarily in the Pacific Northwest. Megan’s primary background includes classical ballet and contemporary dance, movement theatre, and psychology (B.A.). She is also a practicing special educator and sexual assault support worker and incorporates skills from those disciplines into her practice. Megan has consulted, instructed, and presented internationally as an IP and works predominantly in Victoria and Vancouver. Select credits include Superman & Lois (CW), Reginald the Vampire (Syfy), Selma Burke (Theatre Calgary) and Seventeen (Western Gold Theatre).
CONOR MOORE
Crew safety in union and non-union environments
Conor Moore (he/him) is a Vancouver-based labour organizer living on unceded Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) and xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) land. He currently works as an Organizer for IATSE 891, Recording Secretary for IATSE 118, and President of the Arts and Cultural Workers Union IATSE B-778. He aims to help workers amplify and increase their own inherent power that they possess, as workers -- whether they are organizing around higher wages, more control over their working conditions, or to create safer worksites, workers themselves hold the power to create change.
MATTHEW GIONET
Accessibility considerations in post-production
Matthew Gionet stands at the forefront of inclusive media production, championing accessibility through his extensive expertise in audio post-production. With a career spanning over two decades, he has become a trailblazer in the field, particularly in the realms of descriptive audio, audio post production, and Integrated Described Video (IDV). Matthew also has extensive experience with broadcast deliverables such as language versioning, localization, closed captioning and various network requirements. His expertise extends across a wide range of platforms, from major networks and streaming services like Netflix, CBC, CTV, APTN, and Amazon, Hallmark, Lifetime, Tubi Films, and the AMI Network. By providing vivid and immersive descriptions of visual elements, he ensures that every viewer can fully engage with the content. Throughout his career, Matthew has remained dedicated to advancing inclusivity in media production, with contributions that have not only transformed the way we experience media but have also opened doors for individuals to enjoy content without barriers.
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Saturday May 4th 2024
6:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
$13
All-Ages (the bar is closed)
Rating:
🎟️ Get Tickets 🎟️
Childhood is a transversal time for everybody, with each individual experience representing a world unto itself. And sometimes those worlds collide. Early curiosity, fear of the unknown, complex upbringings -- these seven films feature little leading characters fighting for a chance to live their best life.
Champion
California • 13 mins. • Kim J.Y. Han
A 9-year-old Korean girl seeks to rebuild a sense of community and mend her broken heart, after moving to California without her father.
Kim J.Y. Han is a filmmaker with a passion for subversive AAPI and feminist stories. She was a TV development executive at NBCUniversal, a fellow with Film Independent Project Involve, and graduated from the University of Chicago. Champion is her first short film.
He Karu He Taringa
New Zealand / Aotearoa • 13 mins. • Tahuaroa Ohia
An immersive point-of-view short film about how a takiwātanga (autistic) child sees and hears the world.
Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Pukenga, Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi. Tahuaroa Ohia was diagnosed with Autism and Global Developmental Delay when he was six years old. The only way he talked to people was to quote lines from movies & tv shows – thus sparking his interest in screen storytelling. In 2021, Tahu graduated from Whitireia with a Bachelor’s in Performing Arts. During his study he wrote the initial script for He Karu He Taringa as a stage performance, and then completed the M.A.T.C.H (Māoriland Tech Creative Hub) Animation Intensifier Programme. Tahu is passionate about sharing stories that uplift Indigenous people all over the world.
Rage
Colombia • 19 mins. • Andrés Felipe Ángel Machete
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Fabián is forced to spend the afternoon playing soccer with his older brother's group of friends. It rains and the boys bury a dead dog. Meanwhile, Fabián finds himself alone with an unknown impulse; the first bud of his desire.
Andrés Felipe Ángel Machete is a Colombian filmmaker and performer in the Bogotá drag scene, focused on exploring themes related to family and queer childhood experiences. He is the winner of awards for best fiction short film, best direction and best script awarded by BOGOSHORTS 21, in addition to consideration for the 2025 Academy Awards.
Məca
Victoria • 8 mins. • Ritchie Hemphill, Ryan Haché
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A stop motion animation representation of the late Elder Ida Smith telling her grandson the traditional 'Nakwaxda'xw legend of the Mink.
Ritchie Hemphill grew up on Tsulquate reserve and was raised by his community, the Gwa’sala-’Nakwaxda’xw people. Ritchie is both a filmmaker and a recording musician, working to create art that is healing for himself and for his people. Ritchie co-founded the award winning stop motion animation film studio Bronfree Films with his film partner Ryan Haché in 2015.
Ryan Haché is a self-taught stop motion animator and short film director working in claymation and 2D animation. His works range from realism to abstract absurdity and macabre humour. Ryan continues to seek creative collaboration with diverse artists to facilitate and actualize human expression and beauty.
Downwind
Vancouver • 7 mins. • Nathan Rivers
*Filmmaker in attendance*
An obsessive kid tries to successfully make a paper airplane fly, all while mending the challenging relationship with her Mom.
Nathan Rivers is an award-winning film director from Vancouver, British Columbia. A lifelong fan of film, he has been immersed in the world of storytelling since he got his first camcorder as a child. Recently, he graduated from InFocus Film School with a diploma in Film Production.
Little Girl's Wish
Victoria • 2 mins. • Sohee Hong
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A young girl left alone on Christmas Day meets a friend Deer while wandering around the town, but realizes sooner or later that she is left alone again.
Sohee Hong is an emerging filmmaker, and her notable work includes Canada and BC Arts council funded short film My Name Is Arnold as a Producer and Telefilm Talent to watch feature film Mongrels as a Director’s Assistant, Translator, and Associate Producer. She has graduated from InFocus Film School and is now working towards her Visual Arts degree at the University of Victoria.
Tank Fairy
Taiwan • 9 mins. • Erich Rettstadt
Closed captioning & described video are available for this film
Once upon a time, the magical Tank Fairy delivered tanks of gas (with plenty of sass) to the home of young Jojo, a lonely dreamer in need of a glittery godmother...
Erich Rettstadt is a queer American filmmaker and theater artist whose work emphasizes inclusivity and escapism. He obtained his BFA in Film & TV Production from NYU and MFA in Writing for Screen & TV from USC. Tank Fairy premiered at SXSW and won the Audience Award, and has since screened at 170+ festivals in 30+ countries.
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Saturday May 4th 2024
8:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
$13
All-Ages (the bar is closed)
Rating:
🎟️ Get Tickets 🎟️
How can movies capture the intense turbulence of teenage years? The loss of innocence for some, coming of age for many, and overcoming adversity for others -- these seven portraits remind us of youthful angst, the search for love, and the fear/thrill of being alive.
Sounds Within
Victoria • 7 mins. • Pedro M. Siqueira
*Filmmaker in attendance*
In a world of silence, loneliness and darkness, a group of strangers wake up on a post-apocalyptic Earth to find connection with their inner rhythms. This is the second of three films created in partnership between SNAFU Society of Unexpected Spectacles and incarcerated artists at William Head On Stage.
Pedro M. Siqueira is a Brazilian multi-skilled performer, filmmaker, actor, creator and producer based in Victoria, BC. Pedro's curiosity is the ground from which he leaps into the unknown. He ignites the imagination to illuminate the path to artistic realization. As a filmmaker, Pedro's work has been featured at the Canadian acclaimed National Arts Centre (NAC) with Listen and La Fiesta and the International Film Festival of GLOP with his film Humanus Plasticus which was nominated for best film.
You Are the Blue
Vancouver • 14 mins. • Beatrice King
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Kay, an aspiring dancer, must reckon with her identity amidst the struggle with an invisible illness and an all-consuming secret.
Beatrice King is a mixed Asian Canadian writer, producer, actor & emerging director. Based in Vancouver, she has amassed over 40 acting credits in Film & TV. Her directorial debut You Are the Blue is a unique story based on her own journey. As an on set acting coach, Beatrice has worked on productions for Disney, Netflix, and Universal, and coaches actors at her studio, King Creative Studios.
Traveling In Tracy
Vancouver • 7 mins. • Kate Henderson, Solomon Le
*Filmmaker in attendance*
Tracy leaves her neglectful home only to discover she can’t escape the inevitable corruption of feminine youth.
Growing up in Calgary, Alberta, Kate Henderson came through the theatre community to Capilano University's Motion Picture Arts program. Volunteering in the local Vancouver short film scene, as well as Crazy8s and directing an award winning film in Run 'N Gun, she aims to pursue the world of directing in independent film as well as union set decoration.
miss/carry
Sooke • 4 mins. • Megan Ingram
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A young femme processes her miscarriage with a conversation through a wind phone.
Megan Ingram (She/They) is a Teaching Adjunct in the Queen's University School of Kinesiology and Health Studies, and an academic-artist-activist living and working between so-called Kingston, Ontario and Sooke, British Columbia. Their current hyperfixation is the role of memory, and the hazy, complicated ways that our bodies hold stories.
Animals
California • 15 mins. • Jordan K. Paul
*Filmmaker in attendance*
In LA, a young man from the US Virgin Islands navigates a racist LAPD encounter after his white roommate sparks a volatile altercation, leading to a transformative journey exposing the flaws in the American policing system.
Jordan K. Paul, a St. Croix, US Virgin Islands-born Writer/Director based in Los Angeles, is dedicated to bringing a Caribbean perspective to storytelling and rich cultural narratives to the screen. His short film ANIMALS premiered at the Micheaux Film Festival.
Passiflora
Vancouver • 13 mins. • Gabriel Souza Nunes
*Filmmaker in attendance*
In a modern retelling of Brazilian folklore, nervous and insecure Theo discovers love for the first time at a fantastical, avant-garde party.
Gabriel Souza Nunes is an award winning gender-queer Brazilian-Canadian filmmaker based in Vancouver, BC. They are a strong advocate for representation in front and behind the camera, especially for the Latinx and LGBTQAI+ communities, navigating through horror and drama, always adding a surrealistic twist to their work.
Chicken
Vancouver • 14 mins. • Lucy McNulty, Emma Pollard
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A down-on-her-luck, recently single 30-something is forced to move back into her childhood home. As she reconnects with her brother who has Down syndrome, will their differences drive them apart? Or will they see they’re more similar than either of them thought?
Emma Pollard's body of work includes music videos and behind-the-scenes documentaries, featured by platforms such as Spotify, GQ, and FLOOD, award-winning web series, and narrative short films. Her work as a photographer has been featured in Rolling Stone, Far Out Magazine, Subba-Cultcha, and Texas Monthly, as well as album artwork for Nick Waterhouse. She holds a BA Honours from the University of East Anglia in Film and English studies.
Lucy McNulty is a Canadian filmmaker whose notable achievements include winning Jury’s Choice and the DEAI Award for Diversity, Equity, Accessibility and Inclusion at the Thomas Edison Film Festival for her directorial debut “Chicken” which has screened internationally in Canada, the United States, Australia, Europe and the UK. An actor, writer, director and producer, Lucy is the founder of Strange Company Productions and the President of Wet Ink Collective - a writer- driven initiative for women to write, develop and produce stories for stage and screen. Lucy is a graduate of Studio 58, the recipient of the Sydney Risk Acting Award and a two time Leo Award Nominee.
Sunday May 5th 2024
..BRUNCH 'N PITCH
Sunday May 5th 2024
11:00 am - 1:00 pm
Chateau Victoria - Harbour Room
740 Burdett Ave.
* SOLD OUT *
It's a tradition! Our famous film festival brunch buffet is back -- but this time with a twist, to foster creative collaboration and grease the wheels of your new local film projects.
- Sign up in advance as Pitcher or Pitchee (or both). Provide a bit of info about your project(s), which will be used to create meeting pairings that will be revealed on the day.
- Participants who have registered as Pitchers will pitch their projects to participants who have registered as Pitchee. If you register as both, you may end up on both sides of the table!
- We start with a full hot brunch, surrounded by inspiring harbour views from the 18th floor of Chateau Victoria.
- Then we clear the plates and enter a round-robin rotation of ten-minute one-on-one meetings. Also commonly known as "speed pitching." Coffee refills encouraged!
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ANAMORPHIC ON A BUDGET
with Tito Ferradans
Sunday May 5th 2024
1:00pm - 3:00pm
Chateau Victoria - Penwell Room
740 Burdett Ave.
Advance Registration Required
$25
No discounts or promo codes. Screenings Pass does NOT include admission to this event.
🎟️ Get Tickets 🎟️
CineVic is very excited to bring cinematographer Tito Ferradans to Victoria to present his renowned "Anamorphic on a Budget" workshop.
Anamorphic camera lenses have a special look, established as successful by a large number of classic films which were good when they came out and still carry a lot of weight today - Blade Runner, Star Wars, Chinatown, Alien, among countless others. Yet, anamorphics have always seemed out of reach for the indie and no-budget filmmaker.
In this workshop you'll learn about various affordable anamorphic options (including two CineVic lens packages), as well as core ideas that support and explain the anamorphic look. With this knowledge you will be better equipped to choose lenses, and understand your priorities when telling a story in "scope" -- aka, the anamorphic format!
• What makes anamorphic *cinematic*?
• A brief history of anamorphic lenses
• The five pillars of anamorphic
• Faking the anamorphic look!
• An overview of the current budget-minded anamorphic renaissance
Hailing from Brazil and currently based in Vancouver, Tito Ferradans started his journey into anamorphic lenses in the last year of his studies in Film Production at University of São Paulo back in 2012, and hasn't let go of the topic since. His YouTube channel Anamorphic on a Budget has 45k subscribers and covers all-things-anamorphic, from new lens releases to core concepts of the format. Tito is passionate about camera gear and sci-fi narratives, and has a sharp look for the visual aspects of a story.
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Sunday May 5th 2024
6:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
$13
19+
Rating:
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We all grow roots -- to a land, to a ritual, to a culture. Future is granted when today’s existences bloom from these roots. Homesickness, oral tradition, cultural vindication -- these six short tales prove that when it comes to belonging, borders between place and time are merely imaginary.
Okuribi
Vancouver • 7 mins. • Hiromu Yamawaki
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A Japanese Canadian teen, Mei, grapples with disappointment when her long-awaited trip to Japan is canceled due to her father's work. Through a traditional Japanese custom of Okuribi she finds a path to reconciliation and understanding with her father.
Hiromu Yamawaki is a writer/director based in Vancouver, he focuses on making a story about intercultural experiences in multiple languages. He was born and raised in Tottori, Japan. He has background in Film studies at Carleton University and Film Production at Vancouver Film School. His primary interest is to make Asian representation happen both on screen and behind the camera.
Karak
Vancouver • 11 mins. • Ian Tan
*Filmmaker in attendance*
A young couple have a horrifying encounter with a yellow Volkswagen Beetle while driving home on a deserted highway in the middle of the night.
Ian Tan is a Chinese-Malaysian filmmaker based in Vancouver, BC with a BFA in Film Production from UBC. He currently works as an Editor at Atomic Cartoons, one of Vancouver's leading animation studios. Ian is an Editor within the Asian filmmaking community in Vancouver, with award-winning shorts that have screened around the world from Los Angeles, Singapore, Toronto and the Vancouver Asian Film Festival. When he’s not picking up a camera or chipping away at an edit, you’ll find Ian posing his Transformers action figures.
Gloria
Colombia • 14 mins. • Diego Felipe Cortés, Daniela Briceño, Blanca Castellar
Gloria, tired, moves slowly within her thoughts, the mirror, the siphon and the bathroom light.
Daniela Briceño Bello, Diego Felipe Cortés and Blanca Castellar are visual artists who studied at the Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá, Colombia. They created a collective called "Residuo" from which they attempt to explore plastic sensations through animation. Gloria is the first animated short film made together.
Ancestral Threads
Vancouver • 12 mins. • Sean Stiller
Follow Joleen Mitton, founder of Vancouver Indigenous Fashion Week, on her mission to use fashion as medicine for Vancouver’s Indigenous community.
Sean Stiller is an award-winning filmmaker specializing in documentary, Indigenous, commercial and commissioned films. Over the past seven years he has worked on a variety of productions, from TV series to feature length films and branded documentary series, as well as his own original projects. His films have screened domestically and internationally, at the Vancouver International Film Festival, Lunenberg Docs, Hot Docs Festival, ImagineNative, Planet In Focus Environmental Film Festival, Maoriland, and Maryland International Film Festival, among others. He is a recipient of the Hot Docs CrossCurrents Doc Fund, and his first feature-length documentary Returning Home won Best Canadian Feature Documentary at the Vancouver International Film Festival, Calgary International Film Festival and the Edmonton International Film Festival. He is a member of the William's Lake First Nation (T’exelc), part of the Secwépemc Nation.
Cloud Striker
Vancouver • 14 mins. • A.W. Hopkins
A father turns up at an Indian Residential School to reclaim his stolen son.
A.W. Hopkins has written and directed a feature film and three short films. He is a member of the Directors Guild of Canada, has an MFA in Creative Writing, and teaches screenwriting at UBC. A.W. Hopkins is a member of the N’Quatqua First Nation and lives in Vancouver.
Tayal Forest Club
Taiwan • 19 mins. • Laha Mebow
On a hike in the woods, two Tayal youth learn to navigate life’s challenges by paying close attention to lessons that only the land can offer.
As the first Indigenous woman film director from Taiwan, Laha Mebow is best known for feature films focusing on the Tayal community. Her 2022 feature film GAGA garnered Laha the coveted best director award at the 2022 Golden Horse Awards, an annual celebration of Chinese language cinema. With it, Laha became the first Taiwanese woman and the first Indigenous director to win the Golden Horse award for best director. Her previous feature Lokah Laqi! (Hang in There, Kids!) won five awards at the 2016 Taipei Film Awards, including Best Narrative and the Grand Prize. Lokah Laqi! was Taiwan’s submission to the 2017 Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film.
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Sunday May 5th 2024
8:30 pm
The Vic Theatre
808 Douglas Street
Free admission
19+
Join us after the "Future Forests" screening for a short presentation of outstanding film awards! Then stick around for a final mix & mingle to close out the festival.
International Film
BC Film
Documentary Film
Animated Film
Director
Cinematography
Art Direction
Screenplay
Performance
Sound
Music
Editing
May 2nd - 5th 2024
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May 2nd - 5th 2024
764 Yates Street
We just needed to squeeze more local, documentary, experimental, and animation films into this year's festivities -- so we're once again reactivating historic Odeon Alley! No nickel needed, this one's a freebie. 21 short films running 24/7 for public viewing in the Millie's Lane walkway, adjacent to CineVic headquarters in downtown Victoria.
Big thanks to Cenote for the use of their window gallery. We highly recommend Cenote for avant- or après-film cocktails and food (they're open late)!
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And why not check out more lovely local businesses while you're in the neighbourhood:
@papa__moes @theuniontattoo
@stiritupvictoria @fanfavourites
@tomboeats @cenotevictoria
@cheersvintagecollective @thebrickyardonyates
The Red Blanket
Victoria • 6 mins. • Carole Klemm, Jeni Luther
This stop motion paper puppet show tells the story of a hero, torn from the social fabric. Adrift and alone, they encounter other lost souls who remind us that everyone plays a part in healing a community. This is the third in a series of films created in partnership between SNAFU Society of Unexpected Spectacles and incarcerated artists at William Head On Stage.
Carole Klemm is a Victoria-based designer and scenic artist. She has acted as set designer/design mentor for six productions for William Head on Stage: The Hobbit, Fractured Fables, Time Waits for No One, Here, The Crossroads, and Emerald City Project.
Jeni Luther is a visual and performing artist from Metchosin, BC. She has been part of William Head on Stage and SNAFU since 2013. She co-created The Red Blanket for the Common Threads Trilogy (2021) and also Directed Campfire Chills (2022) and the Prison Theatre Time Machine (2022).
Four You, Too
Victoria • 18 mins. • Zinnia McQueen
The story behind the songs on Zinni the Queen's debut album Four A Season, detailing the formative life experiences that inspired the lyrics, the songs she was listening to while creating the music, overcoming insecurities, and learning to use her God-given talents... even if she isn't immediately great at it.
Zinnia McQueen is an artist dabbling in various mediums including writing, singing, music production, video editing, and now filmmaking. McQueen is inspired by the seemingly mundane parts of life, finding beauty in the quiet moments. She resides in Victoria.
I've Been Dreaming Again
Victoria • 3 mins. • Ava Creed
I find joy in the rush of creating a film in a few hours. Of not knowing the reason behind what you are filming. But more importantly the moment everything ties together, ribbon and all. Just like childhood memories. Maddison Davyduck shows us this concept in poetic form.
My name is Ava Creed, and I am a 19 year-old filmmaker. One of my favourite aspects of film is the constant adaptation to unseen circumstances. To limits. So, I gave myself the best limit I could think of: time. One day total. And this is the result.
A Burning Testament
Victoria • 4 mins. • Bill Weaver
A visual collaboration with renowned author and deep ecologist Terry Tempest Williams.
For over 50 years, Bill Weaver has been a producer, director, cinematographer, media strategist, and Peabody-Award-winning television journalist. He believes in projects that unlock the stories already inside us, while amplifying empathy and reconnecting us to the wonder of nature. He is founder of the multidisciplinary Media that Matters conferences.
The Valley
Penticton • 2 mins. • Cam MacArthur
A short film about the yearning we feel for the places we grew up - a memory of a place that only exists in the minds of those that were there.
Cam MacArthur is an award winning director & cinematographer working on documentaries, television, and commercial projects throughout BC. His latest documentary Before They Fall won Best Canadian Documentary at the BC Environmental Film Festival.
23.4 Degrees
Pemberton • 10 mins. • Jeff Thomas
Journey with professional skier Anna Segal across the valleys, forests, boulder fields and mountain summits of British Columbia, as she explores her affinity with seasonal change, and the role it plays in connecting our modern lifestyle to the natural world.
An outdoor creative production veteran, Jeff Thomas has had 18 years of ski film production experience, including working with Switchback Entertainment/Salomon Freeski TV, Poor Boyz, & BLANK Collective films.
Nyanga
Mexico • 20 mins. • Medhin Tewolde Serrano
During the colonial era, Nyanga was kidnapped off the coast of Africa, brought to Mexico and enslaved, but he never stopped dreaming of freedom.
Medhin Tewolde Serrano is Eritrean-Mexican and lives in Chiapas. Upon completing her studies in documentary filmmaking, she became concerned with telling the stories of others. Since then, she has dedicated herself to accompanying participatory video and community communication processes in Spain, Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala. In accompanying these processes, her own process of identity construction as a woman of African descent was revealed to her. This led her to direct her first feature-length documentary Negra. During this process, she learned of the story of Gaspar Yanga, an Afro-Mexican hero who, unfortunately, is little known. For this reason, she decided to create an animated fiction short film inspired by his biography and entitled Nyanga. It is an homage to maroonage yesterday and today.
Also included in Odeon Alley are the following selections from our cinema screenings:
Moonstruck in the Garden of Elements
Gloria
Məca
Little Girl's Wish
Swallow Flying to the South
Puppet Story
Mooncake
Tank Fairy
He Karu He Taringa
They Found Us
Sounds Within
miss/carry
Ancestral Threads
Tickets
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Provides admission to ALL 6 short film screenings, and access to an exclusive networking opportunity. Plus a Short Circuit tote bag (while supplies last).
Screenings Pass
$39
That's the same price as three screenings!
Please note this pass does not include access to non-screening events.
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Single Screening Tickets
$13
CINEVIC MEMBERS contact us to receive your promo code for a
50% DISCOUNT
on advance tickets only, for a Single Screening or Screenings Pass!
Click here if you need to activate or renew your membership.
Programmers & Screeners
A big thanks to the team of local and international filmmakers and festival alumni who reviewed submissions for the 2024 festival:
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Eva Grant is an Indigenous/Eurasian filmmaker and programmer from the St’at’imc Nation. She is a Sundance Native Lab fellow and a former Vancouver Queer Film Festival Programming Disruptor Fellow and an AGO x RBC emerging artist-in-residence. Eva was an associate producer on Madison Thomas’ Emmy-winning documentary Buffy Sainte-Marie: Carry it On, the writer/director of Forest Echoes, the co-writer of CBC’s This Place, the creator of the upcoming heist series Degrees of Separation, as well as a guest director on the Francophone TV show Couleurs du Nord. She studied philosophy and literature at Stanford University.
Iván Reina Ortiz is a Colombian filmmaker and programmer, and director/producer of the documentaries The Squatters of The Devil’s House and autoethnography. In 2020 they co-curated and produced “Más Allá del Trabajo – Beyond Work, Labour Film Festival” for the Cinematheque of Bogotá, and they were invited as guest curator for OutFest’s The OutMuseum with the short film programme “Queer workers of the world, unite!” They currently work at Cinematheque of Bogotá as Programming Coordinator.
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Local folks reviewing international submissions:
Dannie Wang was born in Shanghai, China, and has more than 10 years of experience in journalism and a career engaged rich explorations of nonfiction writing. She has co-written feature film scripts adapted from her nonfiction stories in China as she endeavoured to bridge the gap between nonfiction and fiction storytelling. She completed the screenwriting program at Vancouver Film School in 2022, and has started to produce student short films as her career transition. She is currently in the Intercultural and International Communication program at Royal Roads University.
Michael Korican is a prolific filmmaker with over 60 short films and passionate about telling stories through movies. He has been associated with CineVic’s Short Circuit Pacific Rim Short Film Festival since 2013. In 2005, he was on the jury of the Festival of Forbidden Fruit along with Passia Pandora and Stan Fox. He organized the Toronto Film Now and Film Can screening series at the Bloor Cinema between 1985 and 1987, and founded the St. John’s Ciné Club in Brussels, Belgium, in 1975. He loves a good rom-com and is currently watching a lot of K-dramas on Netflix.
Sina Moazenizadeh is the visionary founder of Helz Pictures Inc. He embarked on his filmmaking journey in Montreal, transitioning from a producer assistant to an assistant location manager in Vancouver. Over the past two years, his talent in creative direction and producing has been evident through award-winning works like Chaos Theory: Decades and The Minute I Was Born, recognized at film festivals including the Whistler Film Festival and Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival. These accomplishments were fuelled by multiple grants from Creative BC, supporting impactful music videos and showcasing Sina’s dedication to pushing artistic boundaries. A graduate of Capilano University’s Documentary Filmmaking program, Sina holds an MS in Industrial Engineering and a BM from Tehran Music Conservatory.
International folks reviewing local/BC submissions:
Madi Stine is an award-winning writer/director based in Los Angeles. Her short films have screened at festivals including Palm Springs ShortFest, and Nantucket Film Festival. A feature script of hers recently won the Harvardwood Writers Competition. Her short mermaid film Out of Water was an award winner at the 2023 Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival, she’s a graduate of Harvard College and Columbia’s Film MFA program, and she has volunteered at Vancouver International Film Festival.
Nicholas Riini has worked in the film industry for 20 years in technical departments and currently as a Gaffer, on everything from music videos to television and feature films in New Zealand and abroad, from Wellington Paranormal to The New Legend of Monkey, King Kong to Ghost in the Shell. His on-set experience has provided a front-row seat to many storytelling and directing styles, and Nicholas has written and directed several award-winning short films with more in development. He has been a judge for international script writing competitions and the International Youth Silent Film Festival, and his short film A Morning with Aroha screened at the 2022 Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival.
Stephani Gordon is an award winning cinematographer and producer with 15 years experience in documentary filmmaking. Before becoming a filmmaker, she was a marine field biologist, living and working in remote locations around the Pacific. Stephani has filmed for National Geographic, NOAA, National Park Service, Smithsonian, BBC, Conservation International, US Fish and Wildlife, PBS, and others. Her short films have received international recognition and awards, playing for the United Nations, the Office of the U.S. President, IUCN World Parks Congress, film festivals around the world, and in remote villages of island nations. She has a love of all things wild and of helping people tell their stories. Her short documentaries My Haggan Dream and Vala North screened at the 2017 and 2021 Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film Festival, she has judged for Jackson Wild Film Summit for several years, and she currently works for Oregon Public Broadcasting and runs Open Boat Films in Portland, Oregon.
Gratitude to our Festival Sponsors:
Much Love to our Community Partners: