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With
just four months to the Sheffield DocFest 2006, the festival is
delighted to announce a sneak preview of this year’s programme. Now in
its 13th year, the festival is the
UK ’s must attend event for anyone working in documentary and factual film and television.
This year’s film programme showcases some of the greatest international talent working in the documentary genre today.
The creator of some of the most talked about UK documentaries, Paul Watson will accompany the World Premiere of his latest film, Making a Documentary, MAD
(working title), to Sheffield. The documentary presents a savage
portrait of Dickensian poverty and alcoholic abuse in Blairite time.
The acclaimed filmmaker will also present a masterclass this year,
which will be sure to be one of the most controversial sessions in the
festival.
Joe Angio's How To Eat Your Watermelon In White Company (And Enjoy It) follows the life of the talented, inspirational, renegade, womanizer Melvin van Peebles. (UK Premiere). Wide Awake is Alan Berliner's (Nobody's Business, The Sweetest Sound) uniquely personal tour through his life-long obsession with insomnia (UK Premiere). Anna Bucchetti's Dreaming by Numbers
takes the audience to a century-old lottery office in Naples, where
everyone drops by to place a bet. It gives an insight into the
superstitious belief in the power of numbers. (UK Premiere)
In Blockade, Sergei Loznitsa (Landscape) newly
assembles Russian archive footage about the siege of Leningrad during
World War II, transcending the historic events to deliver a
breathtaking reanimation of reality. (UK Premiere)
The
DocFest is excited that this year's film programme will include a
special strand curated by legendary filmmakers Nick Broomfield and Kim
Longinotto.
The 2006 industry sessions programme is stronger than ever. For the second year, the festival will host the The Sharp End -
aimed at programme makers hungry for commissioning, co-production and
distribution information. A record number of EP's and buyers will be
participating, including Angus MacQueen, Debra Zimmerman and Barbara
Truyen, Christoph Jorg, Nobue Isobe and many more.
A new marketplace initiative at Sheffield this year will be the MeetMarket, an opportunity to have scheduled one on one pitch meetings with the many buyers attending the festival.
This year's Channel 4 Interview is with Stephen Lambert, Chief Creative Officer of RDF Media. As the creator of hit shows like Wife Swap and Faking It
the festival willlook back at Lambert's contribution to British factual
television, during his distinguished career that spans over 16 years. Few broadcasters can claim to have given the world two-flagship strands that continually reach the summit of innovation and original documentary form.
This year, Sheffield celebrates BBC documentary slots Arena and Storyville, in the A Doc Is For Life - Not Just For Television masterclass
featuring Nick Fraser (Storyville) and Anthony Wall (Arena).
DocFest 2006 is also hosting two special events for newcomers
breaking into the film industry. Student's DocDay Afternoon (DDA) is aimed at A Level and higher education students.
Presented in association with RESfest and FourDocs, DDA gives students unprecedented access to some of the best names in the industry. While, Newcomers Day
offers a fantastic opportunity for the next generation of documentary
makers to meet and get hands-on advice from industry experts. A
9-month paid Researcher placement in BBC Documentaries, courtesy of BBC
New Talent, is up for grabs at this year's Newcomers Day.
The 2006 Sheffield Doc/Fest, will run from Monday October 30 until Sunday 5th November. For information on the festival visit here
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