Showing posts with label aging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aging. Show all posts

Sunday, November 30, 2014

AIFF 2014: Short Narratives In Competition: A Box of Chocolates


This category is like a box of chocolates - lots of little delicious bites of films.  So many choices, which should you pick?  Which will be best?  I haven't seen any of these films, but I've gathered crumbs from each, but not enough to spoil the surprise.


The Short Narratives in competition are spread over three different short narrative programs.  Plus there are several other Short Narrative programs.  I've color coded the programs - the reds are in Global Village, the greens are in Love and Pain, and the purple is in Mixed Bag.

OVERVIEW
  1. THE LIST OF SHORT NARRATIVES IN COMPETITION
  2. DESCRIPTIONS OF EACH GROUPED BY THE PROGRAMS THEY'RE IN
  3. LISTS OF THE OTHER SHORT NARRATIVE PROGRAMS

1.  THE LIST OF SHORT NARRATIVES IN COMPETITION


Narrative Shorts In Competition √
Film Director Country Length Program
Arena Martin RathPoland 23m Global Village
Given Your History Molly McGlynn Canada 15m Global Village
How Hipólito Vázquez Found Magic Where He Never Expected To Find It 
[De cómo Hipólito Vázquez encontró magia donde no buscaba]
Matias Rubio Argentina 15m Global Village
Till Then [Bis Gleich] BenjaminWolff Germany 20m Global Village
Tom in America Flavio Alves Brazil 17m Mixed Bag
Universal Language Kirsten Russell USA 35m Love & Pain
What Cheer? Michael Slavens USA 17m Love & Pain

[UPDATE, Dec. 6, 2014:  It turns out I left out Full Windsor - a super short narrative in competition.  It plays in the Love and Pain program.]

2.  DESCRIPTIONS OF THEM GROUPED BY THE PROGRAMS THEY'RE IN

There are four films in competition in the Global Village program.

Global Village - Shorts Program
Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
Into The Silent Sea | Andrej Landin 2013 
**How Hipolito Vazquez Found Magic Where He Never Expected | Matias Rubio 2013   
Intermission | Marielle Gautier 2014 
**Arena | Martin Rath 2013  
**Given Your History | Molly McGlynn 2014   
**Till Then | Benjamin Wolff 2014  
 **= films in competition



Screenshot from trailer - "shot in a perpetual twilight"
Arena
Martin Rath   
Poland
23m √

Culture.Pl lists this Polish film, with a German director,  among The Most Interesting Debut Films of 2013

It won what appears to be the main international prize at the Cork Film Festival where they posted this brief assessment:

"Grand Prix International (€1,000)
Martin Rath, Poland
Jury Statement: From the first to the final frame, Arena maintains a threatening ambiguity. Shot in a perpetual twilight, things are always about to get dark, and Rath’s immense skill is to hold the tension as the film oscillates between machismo and sensitivity.
Cork Short Film Nominee for the European Film Awards 2014
ARENA"
From the Krakow Film Festival:
"A hitchhiker is taken in by an remote Polish mountain community. Absorbed by the charismatic locals and unforgiving harshness of his new environment he constitutes his presence in the mountains. But to whom do we have to prove of what we're made?"
Part of Global Village Program that plays:
Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
***********************************************************


Given Your History
Image from  National Screen Institute Canada:
Canada
15m √

This is the US premiere of this film.  It's only been publicly shown once so far - in Hamilton, Canada

From the National Screen Institute Canada:
NSI Drama Prize short Given Your History, from writer/director Molly McGlynn and producer Laura Perlmutter, is getting even more festival exposure.
Next month it screens at the Hamilton Film Festival on Saturday, November 8 at 9 p.m. as part of the drama shorts 2 programme at the Staircase Theatre.
The short also screens in Alaska in December at the Anchorage International Film Festival as part of their short film selections.
Given Your History is an honest look at two sisters trying to move on after their mother’s death from breast cancer.
This means, Anchorage audiences will be among the first to see this film, and it's possibly an US premiere.  There apparently has been a shorter (4 minutes) version that's played in fesitivals Seattle and elsewhere.

Part of Global Village Program that plays:
Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
***********************************************************

How Hipólito Vázquez Found Magic Where He Never Expected To Find It  [De cómo Hipólito Vázquez encontró magia donde no buscaba]
Matias Rubio
Argentina
15m √

From Two Short Nights Film Festival website:

"Hipólito Vázquez is a talent scout. With his loyal partner Cholo, he is looking for a little child whose supposed to “do magic with the football”. Therefore they go on a long journey to the distant Club “La Camelia” following the advices of a mystery man. But as the trip goes along, not everything goes as planned and maybe what he ends up discovering was not exactly what he expected to find."
Based on a map on the films Facebook page, this appears to be only the third US showing.  It got the Grand Jury Prize at the Indiana Short Film Festival in October this year.

Part of Global Village Program that plays:
Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
***********************************************************


Image from Spiffest

Till Then [Bis Gleich]
Benjamin Wolff
Germany
20m √

From a review by Beth Groundwater at the Breckenridge Film Festival:

"A man and a woman sit at their respective windows across from each other on a busy street in Berlin, Germany, and observe the interesting minor dramas unfolding on the street below them. They never speak, but they acknowledge each others presence. But then one day the man does not appear. What should the woman do?
Instead of relying on on a preponderance of dialogue to express emotion and move the story forward, the scriptwriter, Tara Lynn Orr, and director, Benjamin Wolff, expertly use the characters' actions to tenderly reveal the story to the viewer, the courage it takes for the woman to act, and the bittersweet result. This nineteen minute smile awaits you!"


Part of Global Village Program that plays:
Sun, Dec 07 3:00 PM  AK Experience Large  
Thu, Dec 11      7:30 PM  AK Experience Small
***********************************************************
***********************************************************


Two films in competition in the Love & Pain program.


Love & Pain - Shorts Program
Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
Four Brothers. Or Three. Wait ... Three. | Philip Buiser 2013
The Mourning Hour | Susan Cohen 2013
**Universal Language | Kirsten Russell 2014
Beneath the Trees | Kitty Mahoney 2014
Reaching Home | Kenneth Murphy 2013
Full-Windsor | Faraday Okoro 2014
**What Cheer? | Michael Slavens 2014
**= films in competition

[UPDATED 12/6:}  Full Windsor
Image from Ari Fulton Design for Stage and Film

Faraday Okoror
USA
6m

A 10 year old boy battles his mother in order to wear his father's tie to school.



Part of Love & Pain Program that plays:
Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
***********************************************************

Universal Language
Kirsten Russell
USA
35m √

Excerpt from Universal Language's Kickstarter page:  (It got more than its $3500 goal)

"In the spring of 2013 I had plans to be in Austria for two weeks.  I got a call from a long-time friend (and gifted actress), Frederique Nahmani who had moved back to France.  And she threw and idea at me.
"If you're going to be in the neighborhood, why not swing over to Paris...and shoot a little film."Now what normal person, let alone filmmaker, is gonna turn that down?
the scriptI just had to write a script. So I started with the most obvious thing…the language. Or for me the language barrier since I'd be shooting a film as a stranger in a strange land.  I knew who my lead actress would be (clearly Frederique) and since I like to write for specific actors, like dysfunctional muses, I approached Marcel Simoneau, another long-time friend and filmmaking buddy.  And with these two, I made up Dan and Sophie... "

The film she did for Kickstarter probably gives us a good introduction to the film:




There's a long interview at FilmCourage if you want to know more.

Part of Love & Pain Program that plays:
Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
***********************************************************



What Cheer?
Michael Slavens
USA
17m √

It's hard to find something about a lot of these movies that isn't just a copy of the official description of the movie.  I want you to get a sense of the movie without giving anything away that might spoil it.  So, here's what a film maker Patrick Longstreth wrote on his blog 
"One of my favorites was “What Cheer?” starring Richard Kind. We shared a Q&A with director Michael Slavens, who is a thoughtful filmmaker and really nice guy. I was very happy to see his film win the “Filmmaker’s Favorite” award."

What Cheer?  won the The Black Bear Award for Best Use of Sound at the Athens (Ohio) International Film Festival.



Part of Love & Pain Program that plays:
Sat, Dec 06  12:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
Thu, Dec 11  6:00 PM     Alaska Experience Large
***********************************************************
***********************************************************


And one film in competition in the Mixed Bag Shorts Program:

Mixed Bag  - Shorts Program
Thu, Dec 11 8:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large
One Armed Man | Tim Guinee 2014
Samantha '66 | Dan Wainio 2014
**Tom in America | Flavio Alves 2014
The Ladder | Pete Fitz 2013

Zugwang | Yolanda Centeno 2014
**in competition


Tom in America
Flavio Alves
Brazil
17m √

This one only plays once as far as I can tell.  And although its director is a Brazilian and this is categorized as a Brazilian film, it takes place in New York, with a couple who celebrate their 50th anniversary, and then . . .  It stars two academy award nominees - Sally Kirkland who was nominated according to Wikipedia
"1987 for Anna, for which she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Drama"
and Burt Young, who, again according to Wikipedia, was also nominated for his role
"as Sylvester Stallone's brother-in-law Paulie in Rocky (1976), for which he received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor."
He's also been in a lot of other well-known movies television shows from Chinatown to M*A*S*H and the Sopranos.

The clip below is NOT the official trailer, but the opening theme scored by Walter Schick.





Part of Mixed Bag that plays:
Thu, Dec 11 8:00 PM    Alaska Experience Large Unfortunately at the same time as Global Village Program with four other Short Narrative films in competition.   So see Global Village on Sunday Dec. 7 at 3pm
***********************************************************
***********************************************************


3.  LISTS OF THE OTHER SHORT NARRATIVE PROGRAMS


Three More Narrative Shorts Programs:

  • Alaska Grown (Thursday 8pm), 
  • Mexican (Friday Dec 12)  and 
  • Chinese Short Film Programs (Sun Dec. 14)


Plus fifteen, mostly 2 minute, shorts from kids in the Iditarod School District.


Alaska Grown
Sat, Dec 13  5:00 PM   Alaska Experience Large
Russian Jack | Jonathan Lang 2014
Speak No Evil | James Elden 2014
Wrong Side Up | Henry McComas 2014
STORYTELLING | the movie | Stefanie Black 2013
Six Dead Bodies Duct-Taped to a Merry-Go-Round | Kevin T. Bennett 2014
Look What You Did | Eirin Strickland 2014
Beneath the Trees | Kitty Mahoney 2014


Short Films From the Guanajuato International Film Festival
7:00 PM     Fri, Dec 12  Alaska Experience Theater - Large
Under The Sun [Bajo el sol] | Arcadi Palerm 2012 
Fifteen Years [Quince Años] | Liliana Torres 2012 
An Eye [Un ojo] | Lorenza Manrique 2012 
No Brakes [Sin Frenos] | Pancho Ortega 
Eskimo [Eskimal] | Homero Ramírez 2011



UAA Confucius Institute 
Short Films from China
Sun, Dec 14  2:30 PM  Alaska Experience Large
Return to Prairie | Liqi Yi
Can’t Piss | Xinqi Song
Summer Secret | Zeng Zeng
Grandfather’s Wishes | Yu We



There are also feature films as part of the Mexican films and the Chinese Films.


Friday, August 16, 2013

Caregiver Payroll Taxes - Issues For Adult Children With Aging Parents

When we got a caregiver for my mom, we talked to her accountant about what we'd have to do.  He offered to take care of the quarterly and year end reports.  We just had to send in what we paid for the quarter.  When he got our first quarterly report information, he contacted me to say that we had paid our caregiver gross and not net pay.  I guess that is something obvious to people regularly involved in this, but he hadn't explained that to me and I certainly wouldn't have known how to calculate the various taxes that needed to be deducted and he hadn't directed me to any way to do that.

If you tell someone to boil an egg, you probably assume they know they need a pot, some water, some heat, etc.  I guess the accountant thought he was telling me to boil an egg.

In any case, he did then suggest a company and an online payroll tax calculator.  I tried the online calculator, but it didn't have options I needed.  Like a daily, rather than an hourly wage rate.  I talked to a company representative, but they were really set up for doing a lot more than one or two employees and were much too expensive and suggested we look for a company that specializes in stuff more like we needed.

The accountant sent me another name.  I talked to him yesterday and he came by today.  I still need to get my mom's tax id number.  The accountant applied for it but he didn't get it in his office and thinks maybe it got sent to my mom.  But my mom and I have gone through most of the paper work that came to the house in the mail in the last month, and I haven't seen it.

I'm sure this isn't too difficult and if I could find a program for this I could do it myself, but being split between LA and Anchorage and my mom wanting some control over this, I just gave in and said ok, we'll do this.  Perhaps over time I'll be able to take it over myself, but for now I've had too many other new things to handle and having someone who will do it for me feels like a great relief.

I mention all this because when I've looked on websites for handling issues relating to taking care of seniors, I haven't found anything that got into the details of things like payroll taxes for caregivers.  I'm playing with the idea of another blog that goes into the experiences I'm having with my mom.  My family has said they don't want google to find out info about them on this blog, so I'm generally circumspect with names and photos and details about what they are doing.  And I don't really want to talk about my mom quite as publicly as this blog.  Another blog that's anonymous would work better. And the blog would just be dedicated to the aging and caring issues.

Before I do that though, I need to do more internet searching to see what all is already out there that I've missed. I need to use different search terms too.

Before posting this today, for example, I searched more specifically for "payroll taxes for caregiver for elderly"  and found information from Caregiver I needed four months ago, when I didn't know that I needed it or what I should be looking for.

"The Caregiver as Employer
By Jude Roberts, Staff Writer
(Page 1 of 2)
When hiring a professional in-home caregiver, there are a couple of ways in which they can be selected, either from an agency which specializes in screening and placing professional caregivers, or by doing the research, interviewing, screening, and hiring all on your own. Keep in mind that if you hire a professional caregiver on your own, you will be entirely responsible for paying certain types of taxes that may be new to you, as well as having to know which taxes your new employee should be paying as well. Although you’ve hired a professional caregiver, who is much more than just a “domestic housekeeper”, the IRS will recognize you as the employer of a domestic.

If you pay your professional caregiver more than $1400 in cash wages per calendar year (note: the IRS may change this amount annually), you will be expected to file payroll taxes on such things as: Social Security & Medicare taxes (7.65% of gross wages); Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA) (0.8% of gross wages or less in most circumstances); state unemployment and disability insurance taxes levied on the employer; and advance payment of the earned income credit for eligible employees."
This was helpful in explaining to the caregiver why we had to do it this way (as advised by the accountant) instead of paying her as an independent contractor.

But I haven't found any really good general websites on aging parents that give good, comprehensive advice on things like this. That alerted me to issues I hadn't thought about but needed.  I'm sure they must be out there. 


For an example of how hit and miss this is, here are the top ten hits I got googling "elderly parents adult children" today:   [All these are brief excerpts, click links to get more.]

1.  Aging Parent offers a way for children caring for their parents to connect.  It offered
The Caregivers' Survival Guide:
Family Caring for Family
FREE when you sign-up for the Caregivers' Newsletter.
 It has a lot of options for different kinds of care for a parent - you can fill in your zip code and check off what you need and they come up with a list of providers in your area.  But I can't find the taxes information.  

2.  Time magazine story:

Caring for Aging Parents: Should There Be a Law?


China’s government thinks so, and as the population of elderly in nearly every society starts to swell, such eldercare laws are becoming more common. But are they effective?
2.  CBS Philly article:

"Survey Shows Adult Children None Too Anxious To Take Care Of Aging Parents 

June 4, 2013 11:49 AM

By Chelsea Karnash
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – Think your kids will take care of you in your Golden Years? They might, but they won’t be happy about it. . . "


4.  Elder Law Answers

"Requiring Adult Children to Pay for Aging Parents

Did you know you could be responsible for your parents' unpaid bills? Twenty-nine states currently have laws making adult children responsible for their parents if their parents can't afford to take care of themselves. While these laws are rarely enforced, there has been speculation that states may begin dusting them off as a way to save on Medicaid expenses."
5.   Prairie River Home Care

Caregivers in St. Cloud, MN: Adult Children as Caregivers for Aging Parents


Of all individuals providing care to older adults, 42% of them are adult children. Most child caregivers are the daughters or daughters-in-law of the person receiving care. Throughout the passage of a person’s life, the care, comfort and assistance received are often given by one generation to other family members in a different generation. For example young children are cared for by parents and grandparents. When these children grow into middle adulthood, they may be taking care of their elderly parents.

6.  New York Daily News
Health

China to require children to visit aging parents as elderly care poses problem for nation 

Rates of elderly will skyrocket, make up 35% of population by 2053. New law would require children to visit and care for their aging parents.


7.  The Family Firm offers:
Financial Tips for Adult Children of Elderly Parents

As our parents get older, family roles can shift in big ways.
Older parents can suddenly seem distressed by financial management, and taking it on can be overwhelming for adult children. Siblings need to cooperate, parents need to be willing to relinquish control, and everyone needs to communicate clearly — none of this is easy. . .
8.  A New York Times story:

"Adult Children, Aging Parents and the Law

Are children legally responsible for their parents’ care? (Susan Farley for The New York Times)
At the end of my mother’s life, for six months, a year at most, Medicaid paid for her care in a nursing home. She was broke by then, after living on a pittance since she was widowed at 58, using the proceeds from her house to pay for six years of assisted living and part of her nursing home stay and never seeing a penny from a long-term care insurance policy that cost a bundle but covered none of what she needed. She had given my brother and me no up-front money to hasten her eligibility for Medicaid and died with $26 to her name and nothing to leave to her children. The good news was we didn’t even have to put her will in probate."
9.   The International Business Times also has a story about the Chinese law requiring kids to care for their elderly parents.


10.  And finally, the University of Pennsylvania has an article
5-13-2013
Bridging the Gap Between Adult Children and Their Aging Parents: Developing and Assessing a Life Review Education Program