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Montana State University Communications Services

MSU professor invited to show short film at Slamdance Festival

by Carol Schmidt
MSU-Bozeman News Service

01/17/2002 Bozeman--Montana State University film professor Cindy Stillwell's film, "The First Story," has been accepted in the Slamdance Film Festival, an alternative film festival set Jan. 11-19 in Park City, Utah.

The Slamdance Festival, which bills itself as an annual upstart fest, is held in conjunction with the famed Sundance Film Festival. Together, the two festivals are one of the major annual media events for American filmmakers.

Stillwell's 11-minute art film, which features images of trains and tractor-trailer trucks in the large spaces of Montana and Wyoming, was one of 12 shorts and 12 feature films selected from more than 2,468 films submitted to the Slamdance competition.

"It's very cool and I'm very excited at my selection," said Stillwell, who teaches cinematography at MSU. She said alternative filmmaking is a difficult field, and rejection is frequent. Therefore, she was thrilled to learn of her acceptance at a festival where her film will get a great deal of exposure.

"The two festivals draw the Hollywood circus to town for 10 days as filmmakers, actors, agents, producers, distributors and everything in-between attempt to promote and hopefully sell their latest projects," Stillwell said. She said she is pleased to screen at Slamdance because it provides such good exposure for independent filmmakers, "especially those who do not live in New York or Los Angeles."

The vision for "The First Story" began in Lander, Wyo. where Stillwell worked on a dude ranch and in a newspaper darkroom before attending graduate school in film at New York University. The scale of the land impacted her. She returned to the West more than two years ago when she joined the faculty at MSU and became intrigued by trains and tractor-trailer trucks in context with the western landscape.

"Those machines fit differently here (than in other places)." Stillwell juxtaposes images of freight trains and semi-trucks with sequences of non-human forms common in the West, including horses, cattle, sheep and grasses.

Stillwell collected her images throughout Wyoming and Montana over the last two years using a Super 8 camera. She worked with sound designer David Koester, a fellow MSU film professor, on the sound for the film for two months. She says she knew that she and Koester would be good collaborators after he said he remembered hearing Bach in the sound of a chainsaw when he was kid.

Stillwell said she submitted the film to both Park City festivals, but suspected it might be a better fit with Slamdance, which usually has more of an alternative tone than Sundance. Several films that have won awards at Slamdance have gone on to national acclaim, including "Memento" and "Monster's Ball." Last year the winning short, Stillwell's category, was "Bean Cake," also a winner at Cannes Film Festival.

"The First Story" will screen at Slamdance at 10 a.m. Jan. 13 and 3 p.m. Jan. 16 at the Silvermine on the outskirts of Park City. Stillwell's film will be shown both times in combination with another short and a feature film and it will be eligible for a Slamdance award, cash or other prizes.

A 300 dpi black and white photo of MSU Film and TV Professor Cindy Stillwell is available on the web at: http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/univ/CindyStillwell2002bw.jpg a smaller version for previewing on the web is available at:
http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/univ/CindyStillwell2002bwsm.jpg


Send questions or comments to Carol Schmidt: cschmidt@montana.edu. Or you can send letters to Carol Schmidt, MSU Communications Services, 416 Culbertson Hall, Bozeman, MT 59717.

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