HomeAsian Americans2015 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival Awards Announced

2015 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival Awards Announced

 

<em>Pangia Pangia, Romaine Samworth, Eiko Fan, Lila Yomtoob, Lia Chang, Garth Kravits and Eddie Shieh at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia after the PAAFF'15 screening of the Women's Shorts Program on November 21, 2015. Photo by Rob Buscher</em>
Pangia Pangia, Romaine Samworth, Eiko Fan, Lila Yomtoob, Lia Chang, Garth Kravits and Eddie Shieh at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia after the PAAFF’15 screening of the Women’s Shorts Program on November 21, 2015. Photo by Rob Buscher

By Lia Chang
AsAmNews Arts and Entertainment Reporter

It’s a wrap for the 2015 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival which ran from November 12th – 22nd at International House and the Asian Arts Initiative.

This year’s festival was comprised of 23 features and over 30 shorts from 17 countries spread over 4 continents, and of these, 5 were East Coast premieres and 14 were Philadelphia premieres. There was also a special presentation from the Center for Asian American Media’s Muslim Youth Voices project featuring world premieres of short films produced by local Muslim youth.

Phuong Nguyen, PAAFF'15 Development Director, Rob Buscher, PAAFF'15 Festival Director, Lia Chang and Garth Kravits at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia after the screening of the Women's Shorts Program on November 21, 2015. Photo courtesy of PAAFF'15.
Phuong Nguyen, PAAFF’15 Development Director, Rob Buscher, PAAFF’15 Festival Director, Lia Chang and Garth Kravits at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia after the screening of the Women’s Shorts Program on November 21, 2015. Photo courtesy of PAAFF’15.

My filmmaking partner Garth Kravits and I were delighted to have our film Hide and Seek screen at The Festival as part of the Women’s Shorts Program at the Asian Arts Initiative.

This year’s 2015 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival award winners were announced on the closing night of The Festival. Congrats to all of the winners.

Seoul Searching
Seoul Searching

Benson Lee’s Seoul Searching (Korea) received The Best Narrative Feature Award and the Audience Choice Award for Narrative Feature.  Seoul Searching is set against the backdrop of 1980s Seoul and inspired by a summer exchange program that Lee attended in the summer of 1986. This John Hughes-esque teen comedy tells a universal coming-of-age story chock full of pop culture tropes, teen hi-jinks, and first love.

PAAFF'15 Festival director Rob Buscher presented The Best Documentary Feature Award to Right Footed's Jessica Cox and Nick Spark at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia on November 22, 2015. The film also received The Audience Choice Award for Documentary. Photo courtesy of Right Footed.
PAAFF’15 Festival director Rob Buscher presented The Best Documentary Feature Award to Right Footed’s Jessica Cox and Patrick Chamberlain  at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia on November 22, 2015. The film also received The Audience Choice Award for Documentary. Photo courtesy of Right Footed.

 

Nick Spark’‘s Right Footed (USA) received The Best Documentary Feature Award and The Audience Choice Award for Documentary.

Right Footed

Right Footed is a film following Jessica Cox, a Filipina American born without arms, who became the first person licensed to pilot an airplane with her feet, as she transforms from a motivational speaker to a mentor, and eventually into a leading advocate for people with disabilities. Be sure to read Shirley N Lew’s story on Cox.

Tadaima

The Best Narrative Short Award was presented to Tadaima (dir. Robin Takao D’Oench, USA),  a film exploring what happened after the closure of the US internment camps at the end of World War II, when a Japanese American family returned home and found the strength to rebuild both their house and family amidst the emotional and physical destruction caused by the war.

'Fall Seven Times Get Up Eight: The Japanese War Brides' received The Best Documentary Short Award. Left to Right: Karen Kasmauski, Megumi Nishikura, Kathryn Tolbert at the Philadelphia Asian American 8th annual Film Festival on Nov. 22, 2015. Photo courtesy of Karen Kasmauski
‘Fall Seven Times Get Up Eight: The Japanese War Brides’ received The Best Documentary Short Award. Left to Right: Karen Kasmauski, Megumi Nishikura, Kathryn Tolbert at the Philadelphia Asian American 8th annual Film Festival on Nov. 22, 2015. Photo courtesy of Karen Kasmauski

The Best Documentary Short Award was presented to Fall Seven Times Get Up Eight: The Japanese War Brides (dir. Lucy Craft, Karen Kasmauski, Kathryn Tolbert, USA).The film examines what it was like to abandon family, friends and country, and marry a former enemy via the stories of three biracial Japanese American women who tell the story of their mothers who landed in 1950s America – the brides of young GIs brought home from an enemy nation.

Jalal's Story
Jalal’s Story

The Audience Choice Narrative Honorable Mention was presented to Jalal’s Story (dir. Abu Shahed Emon, Bangladesh) – a film following an infant, rescued from a river and adopted, later abandoned, who becomes a gangster in adolescence.

PAAFF'15 Guest Services Coordinator Reema Kanzaria and Festival Director/Programmer Rob Buscher and Abu Shahed Emon (Jalal's Story). Photo by Lia Chang
PAAFF’15 Guest Services Coordinator Reema Kanzaria and Festival Director/Programmer Rob Buscher and Abu Shahed Emon (Jalal’s Story). Photo by Lia Chang

The Audience Choice Documentary Honorable Mention was presented to Waiting for John (dir. Jessica Sherry, Vanuatu) – a film exploring the John Frum Movement, now considered the last surviving Cargo Cult, from the perspective of the last village of believers, as they struggle to preserve their culture in the modern world.

Waiting for John
Waiting for John

SPECIAL AWARD
The Vijay Mohan Social Change Award, a new honor named after the late PAAFF staff member recognizing a film or filmmaker who embodies Mohan’s spirit of transformative change through media, was presented to Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten (dir. John Pirozzi, Cambodia) – a compelling documentary uncovering the forgotten history of the Cambodian music scene during the Vietnam War era, which blended Western rock and roll with local traditions, and was suppressed by the Khmer Rouge.

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The 2015 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival is presented by Comcast NBC10 Telemundo62 Comcast Spectator; and made possible through the generosity of Premier Sponsor Aetna; Founding Sponsor HBO; Partner Sponsors Wells Fargo, PHLDiversity, Pennsylvania Department of Drug & Alcohol Programs, and Samuel S. Fels Fund; and Prime Sponsors PECO, Jefferson Health, Pacific Islanders in Communications, Greater Philadelphia Asian Studies Consortium, and Hepatitis B Foundation.

For more information about PAAFF’15 visit phillyasianfilmfest.org and follow on social media @paaff or #PAAFF15.

Lia Chang. Photo by Garth Kravits
Lia Chang. Photo by Garth Kravits

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Examiner.comBroadwayworld.comJade Magazine and Playbill.com.

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