The short film Offline, by Kate Kelsen was accepted into the Pittsburgh Independent Film Festival!
In a different time, I would be incredibly excited to finally screen some of my work in my ancestral city. However, due to the pandemic, the screening schedule for the festival is postponed. I am still waiting for an update whether the festival is going to continue online or wait out the pandemic to do in-person screenings.
The festival states:
The Pittsburgh Independent Film Festival is Pittsburgh's own film festival for truly independent films, and a headline event for micro-budget and no-budget films in the USA. PIIF offers a fantastic opportunity for undiscovered filmmakers to showcase their achievements, filmmakers who posses an independent vision and operate to create innovative work outside the studio system. Two recent winners of the festival have secured a distribution deal, as a result of entering our festival. Both our 2016 and 2018 winners are now in worldwide distribution. PIIF presents the best of low-budget filmmaking from around the world, and mixes it up with relevant industry discussions and targeted social networking events. PIFF uses the strength of the independent filmmaking community to put on a fantastic festival. PIFF is an indie film festival by and for indie filmmakers. PIFF is seeking to uncover and platform emerging films, talent, trends, production methods, and distribution models that will shape the future of film. To support and accelerate new paradigms of distribution, PIFF creates a forum for groundbreaking talent and thought-leaders to share and experiment with ideas on the changing landscape of the independent film industry. PIFF offers a variety of categories for submission and opportunities for recognition. Focusing on emerging talent, politics never comes into play. You will be competing with fellow Indies not studio films made with an Indie label just so they can say they are “indie”. We are looking for truly Independent films (Features, Shorts, Animations, Music Videos, New Media, and more) from film makers who know just how hard it is to produce a film on a limited budget.
The link to the website is here, although the site looks like it needs updating:
http://pghindie.com/Welcome.html
I'm very proud of this little short that could, and incredibly grateful to put another laurel on its poster, especially a laurel from the city of Pittsburgh!
I hope when this pandemic is over I can share my work with family and friends in the area, plus show off a city I love with my friends from the cast and crew.
Yinz goin dahntahn gnat?
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