Posts Tagged ‘Faith Healer’

Countdown to Milan

by Adam Hirsch

nomination2010_NEROtrasparenzeWell, it’s looking like the time has come for the Company to go international.  I’m hopping the pond over to Europe to take Faith Healer to the Milan International Film Festival, where it’s nominated for Best Short Film.  Check out the program here.  It screens on Sunday May 9 at the Teatra Gnomo.

I’ll be posting updates on the blog periodically over the week, but if you want the play-by-play action follow me on Twitter.


FAITH HEALER at the Alabama International Film Festival

by Adam Hirsch

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This Friday, April 23, Faith Healer is playing at the Alabama International Film Festival in Troy, Alabama.

If you’re in the area, please swing by! Getting some friends of the Company in some seats would be amazing. The festival is being held during TroyFest, the local arts festival, and the entire town’s going to be alive and I’ve heard it gets crazy.

It’s playing at 5:30 pm this Friday, April 23, in Historic Downtown Troy at the Studio Theater on Walnut Street.

Last week, the Geneva Film Festival was a big success and this weekend will be just as great!


Dispatches from the Circuit: Back of the Napkin

by Adam Hirsch

Napkin-Sketch

At around 6:00 p.m. yesterday, the shorts program ended here at the Geneva Film Festival and I walked over to the bar across the street.  I sat down, got a drink, and on the back of the napkin began writing down the first things that came to mind after seeing my work screened (with other people’s hard, truthful work — but more on that in a later post). Here, unedited and unfiltered, is the list.

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FAITH HEALER at the Geneva Film Festival!

by Matt Paley

FaithHealer

We’re proud to announce that Adam Hirsch’s Faith Healer, one of the first Company shorts, is making the festival circuit beginning at the Geneva Film Festival (April 16-18)*.

You can stop by Geneva IL (about 20 minutes west of Chicago), and see Faith Healer at 3:00 on Fri. April 16 at Riverside Receptions or at 2:00 on Sat. April 17 at the Mill Race Inn.  Adam will be there, likely wearing a tie and jeans–unless he’s nervous, in which case he’ll up the style with, I’d wager, a vest.

The full schedule of films is here on the Festival site.

It’s a small festival (30 films or so) so it’s a guaranteed good time.  Everyone showed such support and enthusiasm when we screened last June at the Brattle, we’re hoping to replicate the experience out there in the midwest.

Hope to see you there!

*Screening twice!  You have no excuse!


New Excerpts from Faith Healer!

by Matt Paley

faithhealerstill

Jefferson Bull Fermor, as a boy.

Faith Healer, Adam Hirsch’s 2009 senior thesis film, has been almost as elusive in the past few months as its subject, Jefferson Bull Fermor.  No longer!  Adam finally taped together the last few pieces and scrounged enough up to get it out.  I’m happy to point you to two newly published excerpts from the film.

Much more content to come.


Thank You, For Everything.

by Matt Paley

Success!
We sold a whopping 135 tickets and — with the who-knows-how-many friends and contributors that we comped — filled the (200-something seat) theatre to its brim. It was thrilling to see so many people there that have supported our endeavors for so long. Even more thrilling was seeing so many faces we didn’t recognize. Where did they come from? Why were they there?
Whatever the answer, we hope they got what they came for.
We’re hard at work on some new projects now. Our fledgling third saint, Brian Barth (whose extraordinary cinematographic style is on display in “Bullseye”), is preparing to shoot his senior thesis film in August, tentatively titled “part ii,” and I am happily attached to produce.
Adam is currently penning a sports biography — a sports biography? yes, a sports biography –and making the big bucks.
I myself am working on a project, which I’ll henceforth be referring to as The Blues/The Haircut, going into production this fall (fingers crossed).
Thanks again for the wonderful evening. We’ll see you out there.

The Storming of the Brattle!

by Adam Hirsch


One week from today, on July 10, 2009, at the Brattle Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, we have been given the extreme honor of hosting the East Coast Premiere of our Senior Thesis films, FAITH HEALER (dir. Adam Hirsch) and BULLSEYE (dir. Matt Paley) for everyone and anyone who wishes to come. And it would make all the difference if you would.

Every step of the way in the production of these films, we’ve concentrated on what’s important to us. This screening means nothing if we don’t have people like you there: people who we’ve known over the years, people who have helped inspire and encourage us.
Next Friday will not have paparazzi, nor will it have any saccharine substitutes for substance or integrity. It will have good people coming together to engage in two meaningful works, and it would be all the more wonderful to see you there.

Now We’re Hep.

by Adam Hirsch

We now — very proudly — would like to announce the launch of our brand-new website, sainteliotandco.com, where our media, contact information, clips and trailers for our films (Faith Healer and Bullseye) and everything else can be found.

(Special hugs and kisses to Shoshi and Paul for holding our hands and taking us through it all.)

J.B.

by Adam Hirsch


The answer lies right in front of us: in the box, under the sheets, at the top of that one particular closet perpetually passed by, year after year, the one location we have forgotten to look. No matter how many times it has occurred in the past, we somehow arrive back to that very same conundrum: how could we not have known?

Voices, eyes. The mark is upon us all — carry the burden of revelation: the gift of realization and deference for the situation. It is because we are human, brief and tame, that we may choose to forget — or not to forget — these persisting and relentless situations. There are, as well, different paths we may take toward this revelation; paths we walk down, criss-crossing as we fall into maps of who to listen to; where to gather the information; whether the testimony is fact or tale; whether we have unwillingly invented myths that will weave us around back to where we did not even realize we began. Which is why the truth about J.B. Fermor will never come down from that top shelf. Too many people have a say in it.

Some of the letters found paper-clipped to the pages of the five volumes of Peterson’s Field Guides (1961: 6th Edition) are signed by Piper – who is Piper?

Maybe she’s just an idea, a whisper; something in the dust; an intruder; the memory of a headache; a blur in the background of a photograph; the sensation of the time that a harmony may bring about. Anything else is speculation.

Everything, though, is speculation.

She was a love; that much can be known. She was not a love poem, she was love. The letters were written because she had to write: thoughts (and, yes, speculation) were not enough. Yet there were impediments in J.B.’s path to her.

Were J.B. and Almajean married in bliss? For a time, I’m sure. But their tale is truly lost to the silent and merciless tale of time. Their own relationship – /re/la/tion/ship/: the duration and venture of their union – can only be known through their separate re-collections and dialogues. They do not always match; they do not always want to coincide. Even their union itself can be called into question.

The most useful Almajean came to be resulted from her donation of the BOX to the search for J.B: the contents of the box are very real.

Piper — she loved him. (Love!) It came off her tongue as a new sensation – something that she tried to mimic in her letters to him. She wanted to carve the air with it. They fell in love in the leanest sense of the word, condensed; humid; without questioning, without doubting; with each other as the only evidence. They did not have the weight of the past as a leveraged interest on their emotions (at least, not yet).

What we feel means nothing: it is only the actions we take as a result of those feelings that mean anything at all.

She wrote the letters. She started coughing more but didn’t mind it; it was only when the fatigue set in that she became scared. Her real name was Regina but everyone called her Piper because she whistled so well. She whistled to him. They were young. But. Then there was the lettering, the lottery, the picking and the placement; but it did not matter to them: he would come back soon enough; he would come back to her.

Everything is speculation.

She coughed once when they made love; he thought it was his weight on her chest.

She coughed more after he left; she coughed more into little squares of cloth she kept in her pockets that she made from the leftover linen she and her mother bought to make the new pillowcases.

She mailed him the doctor’s slip, but that was much later. He had been gone for over a year, then. She didn’t know what to do. Her father told her to pray, but she did not think that prayer had much to do with it (blood on her pillow; Bible in her drawer). Her father was the minister. Her chest felt damp.

She remembers when she went with her mother to buy the pillowcase linen in Ardmore. Her mother drove them in (her mother taught her father to drive, actually): Interstate 44 came after almost an hour on the dust and gravel roads. Dust covered the black car and the gravel knocked them around, pellets hitting the side and undercarriage – very hot, since her mother refused to open the windows (presumably because of the dust), the black leather seats sticking to her thighs; she pulled her dress with the crimson flower prints down, pulled it down and peeled the leather off to put the thin material between – but when they made it to the highway the blacktop smoothed the ride out and it was only another half hour into town.

She remembers this day because, one week later, she wrote about it to J.B. in the first letter she ever sent airmail, overseas. The kale green stamp; runny post office pen chained to the counter; the crisp envelope resisting as she wrote down the address, every line of his name a conscious stroke; looking at the address she kept in her dress pocket. The clerk took the letter from her.

The clerk took the letter from her, half-smiled, and tossed it into the box with all the other letters that were going to the soldiers’ camps.

Later that day they bought the linen and they made it into the pillowcases, and even had enough left over for a sheet. The pillowcases (and the sheet) she took with her to the hospital; the hospital that was in Guthrie; the hospital only three stories tall; the hospital where she wrote the other seventeen letters (mailed) and thirteen notes (given) to J.B. and subsequently paper-clipped into the pages of his copy of Peterson’s Field Guides for safe keeping.