Q&A; -- Finding the films for a festival
When the Newport Beach Film Festival opens Thursday, Features
Programmer Keiko Beatie and a host of other volunteers will breathe a
sigh of relief and then start running. The eight days of the festival,
which ends with an awards ceremony April 19, will bring nearly 200 films
from 25 countries to this seaside town. It will also bring a slew of
filmmakers and movie-goers.
Helping to choose the films and deciding when they will play is part
of Beatie’s job, a job she volunteers for. Beatie sat down with Features
Editor Jennifer K Mahal to talk about the festival and the films.
What does a features programmer do?
A features programmer’s goal is to see as many films of quality and
caliber and make a decision if those films would be worthy and justified
and a service to the public or the community where you’re having your
film festival at to screen those films.
My personal outlook -- I enjoy films from all over the world and I
enjoy independent films. When I was growing up, my grandmother didn’t
speak English, she spoke Japanese, and as a treat my uncle and as a treat
my uncle and father would drive us to a Japanese movie theater. I was
maybe 5, 6 years old when I started going. I had to learn how to read
subtitles real fast. And, thank goodness to my mother, we were very
voracious readers and became very used to seeing films with subtitles.
And it just transcended from there at an early age on. And seeing what
it was like in different worlds, different countries and how people
lived. It inspired me to always know we’re just a small microcosm here in
California, and there’s a whole rest of the world to look at and
appreciate. I was very enriched at that age.
For features programming, I think that’s why I want to be able to
share with people the wonderful aspects of the world and how people live,
what they have to offer to enrich us.
The Newport Beach Film Festival is a wonderful community and there are
people here who are really wanting to see films from all over and not
getting the opportunity on a day-to-day basis. We have so many people who
comment and thank us and just really appreciate what we try to bring to
them.
Sometimes it’s very hard making the decision what will be in and what
may not be appropriate.
How do you make the decisions? I understand it’s not just you, but
how do you bring the films forward that you think are worthy of being in
the festival?
I’ve been fortunate enough to travel to different states and cities
and fortunately enough there would be large film festivals when I would
be there traveling and that was a very fortunate thing. Going to other
film festivals, you have people who are experienced in programming
bringing you the best of what their festival has to offer.
To be able to sit there and view the best of their best -- you can
glean from that and give support to other festivals with the knowledge
you gather about some gem from India or some really wonderful action
piece from Australia. You do take from that and if you are able to see
the film, sometimes talk to the producer or director, invite them to your
festival or invite a submission.
There are other organizations that you put the word out there that
there is a film festival looking for submissions and from that we get
submissions from all over. Some are first time filmmakers and some are
experienced. A lot of times ... a buzzword or film that wins an award can
create a whole new career for someone, such as Steven Soderbergh with
“Sex, Lies, and Videotape.” He’s a name brand writer-producer-director
now because of that experience.... People are looking for the next one to
come out of a film festival.
You watch hundreds of films. What makes a film stand out to you?
I find more so I am visual as well as a good story. A good story is
everything. I still believe that there are good stories that deserve to
be told and if it’s mixed with the cinematography. I want to see the
story unfold with deep richness and a presentation that just takes you
into wherever the story is set. That’s two factors right there.
And if it has a good cast, good acting. I don’t need the special bells
and whistles of special effects, which are always great. The story is
everything. And that’s why I think many of the films that do make it here
in Orange County are generated by the larger studios with their own
formula. And not that I don’t appreciate that at times, because I do, but
when I go out to the theater and see something that grabs me like a
“Memento” -- something completely out of the ordinary, extremely
original, a story that has not yet been told like that with wonderful
acting. That’s a film that grabs me....
I believe we have some extraordinary films in our festival that can
present the same thing to the community.
What’s the hardest part of the festival for you, in terms of
putting it together?
Actually, I enjoy so many aspects of it that I can’t think of a
hardest part. One of the hardest parts was sitting down and formalizing
the films and scheduling them to the appropriate feature at the
appropriate time. If a film is in, every filmmaker wants that
Friday-Saturday evening, 7-8 p.m., and not that their film is not worthy
of being there, it’s just that we have time constraints.
I respect the filmmaker. I think one thing about our festival is more
unique than other festivals, we have a real support team here just for
the filmmaker. We know how incredibly hard it is for them. They put so
much of their life, their soul, their sheer inner being out on the line
to be vulnerable and make this film be out there. I think we really
support them with so many things that other festivals do not. It’s an
honor that they will be here and come and show their film. And it’s an
honor that we can be there to be able to support them in their creative
expression.
How many films were submitted or seen versus the number in the
festival?
Over 600 were screened and around that number, I’m not quite sure on
submissions. definitely screened over 600. Of the films that are in we
have 73 features this year, which is about 35% larger than last year. And
22 of those are documentaries and we have over 100 shorts. We have the
largest short film festival within a major film festival. And I have
talked to other film festivals -- the largest film festival in North
America is the San Francisco Film Festival. They’ve been doing it for 45
years. This year they have a total of 198, including features and shorts,
so we are right up there with some of the major festivals....
This is the first year you’ve had more than one screening for
certain films. How do you decide which films screen more than once?
And that was something that a lot of time was invested into
discussing, the pros and cons of showing a film twice and how to make
that decision. Having made a decision was definitely on the caliber, the
appeal of the film and the possibility of participation by either the
filmmakers, cast, crew, etc.
We wanted to be able to play films twice that were films that... we
felt the community wanted to see as well. So that was a hard decision to
make. We have possibly up to 15 that will be replaying twice.
What film are you personally most excited to see on the big screen?
“The Broken Wings of Elijah Footfalls,” I will be very excited to see
that on the big screen. There’s one I did see on the big screen that I
did enjoy, and I would like to see how other people appreciate that.
There’s another one I’m really looking forward to is “When the Rain
Lifts.” The cinematographer for that -- Shoji Ueda -- has done many films
for Akira Kurosawa. I’m really looking forward to seeing that on the big
screen.
Both of those would have to be chosen more for the visual effect, and
for the story too. The stories are great.
And “Interstate 60,” not that it’s visually up there, but it is
interesting in story and has a fun cast.
BIO BOX
Name: Keiko Beatie
Age: “Old enough to know better, young enough to still try harder.”
Occupation: Features programmer/special projects for the Newport Beach
Film Festival, a volunteer position
Residence: Laguna Beach
Family: College-age son
Education: Bachelor’s degree in business, minor in film and music from
UCLA
Hobbies: Volunteering, kayaking, reading, dancing, foreign films,
music, playing guitar and kickboxing
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