I'm going to post this quickly and try to catch up later. This is the director and the person featured in the film Ultimate Citizens.
[UPDATE Sunday night December 8, 2024: Yesterday, like every first Saturday of AIFF, was crazy hectic and wonderful. I met Jamshid and Francine in the Museum atrium before the film, and they looked like they weren't from Anchorage so I started talking to them.
We connected. Then I thought about Gita, also an Iranian immigrant who lives in Anchorage and has been involved in the film festival over the years and wondered if she were coming. Years ago we had an Iranian film maker who spoke no English and Gita had served as the translator for him.
So I called Gita to see where she was - but I gave the phone to Jamshid and told him to speak to her in Farsi.
She didn't answer and so he left a message. I asked what he had said. "Hi Gita, this is Steve. I've learned Farsi so I can talk to you in Farsi. Are you coming to see Ultimate Citizen?
Golden's Alishah Farhang, Ben Sturguleski* and Katie Stjernholm at Q&A |
Jamshid asked about what else was playing Saturday and I pointed out the Afghan skiing film Champions of Golden Valley and Porcelain War. Francine was going off to visit an Anchorage friend, so I offered to drive Jamshid to the Bear Tooth. But after his film, two Iranian Anchorage women kidnapped Jamshid (they asked if they could take him to tea and they'd drop him off at the Bear Tooth).
We met up at the Bear Tooth and we all loved Champions of Golden Valley. And afterward I
found Jam talking to the Afghan ski instructor featured in the movie, who had fled to Germany when the Taliban took over. He was part of the crush of people trying to get on planes as the Taliban had taken over Kabul. Because he had taught girls how to ski, he was a likely target for the Taliban.
Champion ski instructor Alishah Farhang talking with Jamshid Khajavi from Ultimate Citizen |
After, Jamshid explained that Farsi and the main Afghan language are like dialects of each other and easy to understand.
Porcelain War is a beautiful, horrible film about three artists -Slava Leontyev, Anya Stasenko, Andrey Stefanov, who stay in Kharkiv, near the Russian controlled territory. Slava created little porcelain sculptures and his partner Anya painted them. Ukraine, through their eyes, has beautiful natural areas, with exquisite pictures of flowers and birds and insects, all of which she paints in tiny detail.
One of the magical parts of the film was the animation of Anya's miniaturist paintings on the tiny sculptures. The image above is only a hint of the color and detail of the painting. I really didn't capture the richness of the color in this screenshot from the film. This part was animated exquisitely. One of the objects Anya decorated was a drone.
Slava is also in the military, training young recruits how to use their weapons. The film won the Grand Prize award at Sundance and they are now hoping it will get nominated for an Academy Award in (I'm assuming) the foreign film category. I would have preferred there was more Porcelain and less War, but obviously, making a documentary in a war zone is going to have to cover a lot of the war.
By this time we were pretty tired and headed home. As we approached Lake Otis and Northern Lights I thought we could stop in at Turkish Delight for something to eat. I walked in, and there was Gita with a friend. They were talking about the film festival - her friend had never been to one. So I went back to the car to get the schedule. Then I gave her my phone and she left a message on Jamshid's phone in Farsi. Anchorage is a small town.
So, this is just a catchup of yesterday. I still have today - Sunday - to tell you about. Some inspiring shorts, and amazing feature length films. Monday's schedule is up in the last post. Tuesday is a day off and I'll try to get caught up.
*Ben Sturgulewski, for the Alaskans wondering, is the grandson of Arliss, one of Alaska's most competent, dedicated, and principled politicians.
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