A 20 something woman whose mom was gone when she was young and whose dad, Bob Trevino, seems to be always disappointed with her.
She looks up Bob Trevino on Facebook and befriends another one - not her dad. The movie then focuses on their relationship. He and his wife lost a baby years ago, and she needs a father. He insists he is not her father, but they can be friends.
On the one hand this was a small film - it looked closely at a few people and their struggles to connect with others and themselves. But it was also a big film up on that screen. Nothing pretentious, nothing glitzy. Just a human story. I didn't see any actors - the characters were real. I heard more than one audience member say they would give it a ten out of five.
Although the credits said it was purely a work of fiction, when Tracie got up on stage after the movie for Q&A, she let us know it was a fictionalized version of her own story. Several of people said they 'knew' one character or another, that they were that character.
This is the type of film that film festivals are for. It was Tracie's first feature length film. Below, she's talking with audience members after the Q&A was over.
And here she's talking with three young film makers. On the right is AIFF Board Chair, Rich Curtner.
I'll try to get up something on Sunday tomorrow, but I'll also be watching more films.
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