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May 15, 1998

Republished from indieWIRE.

Twenty independent films are screening in the American Independent Film Competition at the 1998 Florida Film Festival, running June 12 - 21, 1998 in Orlando, Florida. The Central Florida event, which has emerged as a leading regional film festival, will open with a screening of Richard Bieman's A Merry War, adaptation of George Orwell's Keep the Aspidistra Flying. The film stars Helena Bonham Carter and Richard E. Grant.

The 1998 festival approaches with a few new faces in place at the Enzian organization, the not-for-profit group that produces the festival. Near the end of last year's fest, Executive Director Sigrid Tiedtke announced that she would step down and introduced attendees to her replacement, Melanie Gasper. Tiedtke remained involved as a member of the programming committee this year. Another departing organizer was media and marketing head Mike Monello, who also remained involved as a programmer. Monello's replacement Rich Grula offered that his focus has been to cultivate greater festival awareness among the local community, building on the success of the festival's homebase Enzian Theater - a popular dinner theater/art house in adjacent Maitland. Grula told indieWIRE that the festival sold 15,000 tickets last year, and with more screenings this year, expectations are that sales will exceed that number.

Program Director Matthew Curtis said that he received over 500 submissions, a 25% jump over last year. Commenting on the 1998 program, Curtis highlighted the three premieres in the dramatic competition, and also noted the strength of the documentary competition. While last year was recognized as a strong year for non-fiction features at the Florida Fest, thanks to screenings of the fest award-winning Hands On A Hardbody and the Oscar nominated Waco: the Rules of Engagement, Curtis said, "The docs last year were phenomenally strong," noting, "this year comes close." Curtis, a former sales director for Corinth Films proclaimed, "We could have easily doubled the doc section...there were a lot of really fine docs that we did not have the room for."

In the documentary competition, ten non-fiction films have been selected: Calling the Ghosts, directed by Mandy Jacobson; The Farm, directed by Jonathan Stack & Liz Garbus; Frat House, directed by Todd Phillips & Andrew Gurland; The Human Race, directed by Bobby Houston; A Letter Without Words, directed by Lisa Lewenz; Midnight in Cuba, directed by Dimitri Falk; Modulations, directed by Iara Lee; Slam Nation, directed by Paul Devlin; Tango the Obsession, directed by Adam Boucher; and Tell About the South, directed by Ross Spears.

As mentioned, three of the ten dramatic features screening in Florida are world premiere's: Harry Bromley-Davenport' s Erasable You, with Timothy Busfield, M. Emmet Walsh, and Jennifer Grant; Stuart Burkin's Harvest, which stars Mary McCormack, John Slattery & Jeff DeMunn; and Matt Mulhern's Walking to the Waterline, starring Mulhern, Hallie Foote, Alan Ruck, Matthew Broderick, and Hal Holbrook. Other films screening in competition are: Brother Tied, directed by Derek M. Cianfrance; Cadillac, directed by Andrew Frank; Every Dog Has Its Day, directed by Marc Chiat; Jerome, directed by Tom Johnston, Dave Elton & Eric Tignini; Tomorrow Night, directed by Louis C.K.; Unmade Beds, directed by Nicholas Barker; and WINDHORSE, directed by Paul Wagner.

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about the author
Eugene Hernandez
Editor in Chief - indieWIRE
While a student at UCLA, I programmed the campus' film series and utlimately headed the UCLA Campus Events Commission - the office responsible for producing concerts, lectures and screenings. After a brief stint working in Hollywood, I spent five years at ABC-TV in the company's expanding Multimedia division. I am currently working with the Network and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as a producer of Oscar.com.

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