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Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Houston Film Critics Awards 2025

Houston Film Critics Society


Sinners – Ryan Coogler’s exhilarating exploration of racial tension, music, and vampires – captured top honors from the Houston Film Critics Society in its 19th Annual Awards.

In addition to being named Best Picture of 2025, the Society presented awards to Sinners’ creator Ryan Coogler for Best Director and Screenplay. Michael B. Jordan was named Best Actor for playing twin brothers, and the film was honored for the year’s best Ensemble Cast, Cinematography, Original Music Score, and Casting. The eight wins by Sinners set a new record for the Society's annual citations.

“Sinners’ landmark success should not be seen as an aberration in cinema, but instead remind us that taking creative risks allow for bold filmmaking and new visions,” said Travis Leamons, president of the organization. “As we do each year, the Houston Critics celebrate their favorites and share their enjoyment with readers and listeners alike. It just so happened we really loved horror in 2025.”

The Society selected Jesse Buckley as Best Actress as a wife and mother searching for calm in the face of tragedy in Hamnet. Honored as Best Supporting Actor was Jacob Elordi as a creature navigating an uncertain future in Frankenstein, and as Best Supporting Actress, Amy Madigan as a mysterious aunt in Weapons.

Winning the Texas Independent Film Award – for the best film made in Texas – was the documentary The Librarians, Kim A. Snyder’s non-fiction exploration of efforts to fight book banning in Texas and Florida. Sentimental Value, Joachim Trier’s tribute to family dynamics, was named Best Foreign Language Feature.

“Throughout the year, our Society members keep audiences informed about the range of films available to them in theaters and at home,” Leamons continued. “As professional journalists committed to the movie experience, we are proud to honor this year’s winners.”


2025 Houston Film Critics Society Awards

Best Picture: Sinners

Best Director: Ryan Coogler, Sinners

Best Actor – Leading Role: Michael B. Jordan, Sinners

Best Actress – Leading Role: Jessie Buckley, Hamnet

Best Actor – Supporting Role: Jacob Elordi, Frankenstein

Best Actress – Supporting Role: Amy Madigan, Weapons

Best Screenplay: Ryan Coogler, Sinners

Best Animated Feature: KPop Demon Hunters

Best Cinematography: Autumn Durald Arkapaw, Sinners

Best Documentary: The Perfect Neighbor

Best Foreign Language Feature: Sentimental Value

Best Original Score: Ludwig Goransson, Sinners

Best Original Song: “Golden”, KPop Demon Hunters

Best Visual Effects: Avatar: Fire and Ash

Best Stunt Coordination Team: Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning

Best Casting: Francine Maisler, Sinners

Best Ensemble Cast: Sinners

Texas Independent Film Award: The Librarians


Five films produced in Texas competed for the prestigious Texas Independent Film Award (TIFA) when the Houston Film Critics Society (HFCS). 

In 2024, Mike McGuff's documentary "Runaway Radio" won the 2024 TIFA. [WATCH HERE]

The 2025 nominees were:


• Ick: Joseph Kahn’s science fiction tale about a high school teacher who does everything possible to deal with a parasitic alien.

• The Librarians: Kim A. Snyder’s documentary focuses on efforts in Texas, Florida and other states to confront those trying to ban books from schools and libraries.

• Luv Ya Bum: This documentary from David Hartstein, Sam Wainwright Douglas, and Andrew Alden Miller profiles Bum Phillips, head coach of the Houston Oilers during the ‘Luv Ya Blue’ era.

• Selena y Los Dinos: Isabel Castro’s documentary captures what happened behind the scenes as a family supported the career of Selena Quintanilla.

• The Senior: Rod Lurie brings to the screen the story of Mike Flynt, who, at age 59, got a second chance to play college football.


“Each year, it becomes more challenging to select five nominees from the many quality films made in Texas,” says Cary Darling, HFCS member and Arts Editor for the Houston Chronicle. “We continue, in our state, to make significant contributions to what cinema can and will be.”

“For more than 10 years the Texas Independent Film Award has shone a spotlight on the creativity and drive of local filmmaking outside the studio system, celebrating artists who tell bold, personal stories rooted in culture and community,” adds Joshua Starnes, HFCS member and long-time coordinator of the TIFA selection process. “The 2025 nominees stand easily alongside the awards’ previous recipients, showcasing a range of voices working in Texas today from inventive genre filmmaking to intimate documentary. The 2025 nominees affirm Texas’ voice in modern cinema.”

To be nominated for the TIFA, a film must be shot in the Lone Star State and submitted to the Society by October 31, 2025. Members of a select HFCS committee screened the possible nominees before all voting members reviewed them and selected the winner. 

“We are proud to salute these three documentaries and two narrative features as they vie to be acknowledged as the best of Texas film of 2025,” says Travis Leamons, President of the Society. “Each year, as more people around the world learn more about making movies in Texas, the opportunities for our filmmakers expand as well as the offerings for audiences.”

The 40 members of the Houston Film Critics Society are working film journalists on television, radio, online, and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their critiques and commentaries on film. The organization’s mission is to promote the advancement and appreciation of film in the Houston community and beyond. For a list of members, visit www.HoustonFilmCritics.com.




Tuesday, December 09, 2025

Texas TV, radio and media gifts 2025

Runaway Radio on DVD


The holidays are almost upon us, so what are some quick gifts you can buy on Amazon related to Texas TV, radio, or media in general?

Now, this idea didn't occur to me just because my 101 KLOL documentary "Runaway Radio" is now on DVD and would make a perfect Christmas gift. It is available on Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy and Barnes & Noble websites. 

No, I thought about the Texas television anchors, reporters, meteorologists, and other journalists who have worked hard on a labor of love like your favorite lowly Texas media blogger did with his 14 year in the making film.

This list is drawn from books I have received releases for over the years, with a few bonus titles from before my blog existed. To illustrate how difficult it is to be an author, some of the books I have featured over the years are no longer available to make this list! 

Here are some Texas media gift options from Houston to Dallas, Austin, and El Paso, plus surrounding areas in the Lone Star State!


Runaway Radio on DVD

Director Mike McGuff

https://amzn.to/4fXE5nX (also available in Houston at Cactus Music)


Desperate Times (Prepper Aftermath Book 2) - November 11, 2025

by Tom Abrahams

https://amzn.to/4pwsDo6


New to News: Navigating your Journalism Journey - December 16, 2024

by Senora Scott 

https://amzn.to/491ceSJ


101 Ways to Rock Networking: It’s not what you know. It’s who you know! - December 5, 2023

by Dayna Steele

https://amzn.to/3BnmNS2


A Place to Anchor: Journalism, Cancer, and Rewriting Mi Vida as a Latina on the Border Hardcover – February 7, 2023

by Estela Casas

https://amzn.to/4gnDLyy


Life Makeover: Embrace the Bold, Beautiful, and Blessed You Hardcover – April 5, 2022

by Dominique Sachse 

https://amzn.to/3B8Kcqw


When America Fell Silent - August 20, 2019

by Freddy Cruz 

https://amzn.to/3DhCpXL


Good Evening, Friends: A Broadcaster Shares His Life - July 1, 2019

by Dave Ward

https://amzn.to/3BaUkix


Always and Never: 20 Truths for a Happy Heart Paperback – April 11, 2019

by Lisa Shumate

https://amzn.to/3OUsp9r


Swabbed & Found: An Adopted Man's DNA Journey to Discover his Family Tree Hardcover – October 1, 2017

by Frank Billingsley

https://amzn.to/4g1aDxk


"It's News to Me" - April 11, 2017

by Olga Campos Benz

https://amzn.to/4f5HYGc


Houston's Morning Show: The True Story of Hudson & Harrigan - November 6, 2015

by Randy Hames

https://amzn.to/4f6bN9r


"I Gotta Story" My 30 Years in TV News Paperback – January 26, 2015

by Minerva Pérez

https://amzn.to/3DjhuDJ


A Wild Ride on the Water Cycle (Jake & Alice) Hardcover – November 1, 2014

by Anthony Yanez 

https://amzn.to/3MOIHTy


Anybody Seen Dan Lovett?: Memoirs of a Media Nomad Paperback – April 17, 2014

by Dan Lovett 

https://amzn.to/41r12LP


Texans Behind the News: Texas Journalists of the Twentieth Century Hardcover – January 1, 2000

by Dede W. Casad

https://amzn.to/3ZpZyyV


Texas Country Reporter: Stories from the Backroads Hardcover – January 1, 2000

by Bob Phillips 

https://amzn.to/3ZHZOuq


Moments: The Life and Career of a Texas Newsman Hardcover – October 1, 1995

by Chip Moody

https://amzn.to/3BhH6At



*I am getting affiliate fees from these links





Wednesday, September 24, 2025

THE GARDENER'S YEAR at River Oaks Theatre


Next week, the night before my 101 KLOL "Runaway Radio" documentary screening at River Oaks Theatre, I'll be kicking off my 20th-year blog celebration at the screening of THE GARDENER'S YEAR on Tuesday, September 30th.

It's a part of the Czech That Film Texas series put on by "Runaway Radio" producer Jeffrey Brown


BUY TICKETS NOW!


A true story of injustice perpetrated on a peaceful gardener by a wealthy neighbor meets Czech author Karel Čapek’s eponymous literary work about a gardener’s har­dships and successes over the course of a year. Czech director Jiří Havelka, one of the most complex artistic personalities of our time, has long proved that “alternative” and “audience-friendly” need not be mutually exclusive. His quietly moving tragicomic story about a remarkably stubborn struggle for the right to a dignified life is built on two great performances by the always outstanding Oldřich Kaiser and Dáša Vokatá.


In Czech language with English subtitles.


Czech Oscar — Best Actor, Oldřich Kaiser


Czech Film Critics’ Award — Best Actor, Oldřich Kaiser



 

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

Gene Hackman's connection with Bob Martin "The Accountant to the Stars"


The death of Gene Hackman, 95, is still being investigated, with his film career being celebrated in the meantime.

With one of his movies having a H-Town-ish tie.

Bob Martin "The Accountant to the Stars" and longtime Houston TV tax expert revealed to me that his mother, Louise Martin, was in the 1973 film Scarecrow with Hackman (WATCH ABOVE).

"My mother is the actress playing the part of the ticket clerk in the final scene of Scarecrow with Gene Hackman," Martin told mikemcguff.com.  "We lived in Detroit in 1972 and the scene was filmed at the Greyhound Bus Depot in Detroit. She was a stage actress all of her life and she did a lot of industrial films and TV and radio commercials. Her agent called her for the cattle call they liked her and she got the part. She used to travel to New York quite a bit for auditions and she also landed a very small part in the Woody Allen film Annie Hall (1977)."

Martin adds that his mother's Scarecrow scene went well, and Hackman was pleased with the result. To compliment his mother when they were done filming, Hackman used the shoe to gently tap her on the nose as a sign of approval! 

Hackman later said that Scarecrow was his favorite movie to work on.  Also starring Al Pacino, the drama tells the story of men from California hitchhiking their way to Pittsburgh with plans of starting a car wash.

Louise Martin passed away from a heart attack at the age of 69 on April 29, 1991.

Her acting career began in the 1930s with the Detroit Stock Company. 

Over the years, she took on roles in approximately 25 community theater productions, showcasing her talent with the Theatre Guild of Livonia-Redford, the Dearborn Players, and Meadow Brook Theatre.

Her portrayal of Mary Todd Lincoln in A Thin Line earned her the Best Performer award from the Metropolitan Detroit Theater Council and was featured on local television.

Mrs. Martin’s versatility shone through in various productions, including The Glass Menagerie, Butterflies Are Free, and Arsenic and Old Lace.

Beyond the stage, she became a familiar face in national and local advertisements, appearing in radio, television, and print commercials for brands such as Anacin, White Cloud, and Jell-O. In the early 1980s, her image graced a Kellogg’s Corn Flakes box. She also contributed to corporate training films for major companies.

Her talent also extended to the big screen, with roles in notable films including Marathon Man and Presumed Innocent.








Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Houston Film Critics to name best of 2022

Houston Film Critics Society


HOUSTON, TEXAS (January 10, 2023) — The Banshees of Inisherin – director Martin McDonagh’s study of friends and family on an Irish island – and Everything Everywhere All at Once – an irreverent look at the possibilities of the multiverse – lead nominees for the 15th annual awards from the Houston Film Critics Society. Both films are nominated for nine honors including Best Picture of 2022.

Other films competing for the top award are Elvis, a fresh take on a performer’s life; The Fabelmans, a personal look at a filmmaker’s beginnings; Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, a unique recreation of a classic tale; RRR, an epic exploration of revolutionaries; Tár, an intense study of a conductor’s drive; Till, a moving commentary on a mother’s grief; Top Gun: Maverick, a return to escapist entertainment from a different time; and Women Talking, a brave consideration of how people confront fear.

“As the industry continues to debate how we should experience the magic of film, moviemakers continue to imagine creative stories about compelling people,” says Douglas Harris, HFCS President. “This year, the films we honor showcase a community daring to rethink, refresh and reinvent.”

Nominated as the year’s Best Actors are Austin Butler for bringing Elvis to life, Tom Cruise for taking us back to the 1980s in Top Gun: Maverick, Colin Farrell for examining the impact of isolation in The Banshees of Inisherin, Brendan Fraser for addressing personal challenge in The Whale, and Jeremy Pope for daring to make his voice heard in The Inspection.

Competing for Best Actress are Cate Blanchett as a conductor who thrives on tension in Tár, Viola Davis as a leader determined to protect her people in The Woman King, Danielle Deadwyler as a mother dedicated to sharing the lessons of tragedy in Till, Emma Thompson as a free thinker releasing her inhibitions in Good Luck to You, Leo Grande, and Michelle Yeoh as a laundromat owner learning to express anger in Everything Everywhere All at Once.

“The range of performances this year illustrate what actor and creator can deliver when they free themselves to imagine,” says Travis Leamons, HFCS Secretary. “It’s difficult to remember a year where each performance could capture the final awards. The nominees are especially strong in 2022.”

An annual highlight of the ceremony will be the presentation of the Texas Independent Film Award, honoring the best of film made in the Lone Star State. This year’s nominees explore the choices of youth in Acid Test, a fascination with outer space in Apollo 10-1/2: A Space Age Childhood, the hopes of would-be parents in Conception, the natural beauty of the Lone Star State in Deep in the Heart: A Texas Wildlife Story, and the extraordinary life of a legendary athlete in Facing Nolan.

All winners will be announced at the Society’s annual awards celebration, Saturday, February 18, 2023, at the Midtown Arts & Theater Center Houston (MATCH). For details, and ticket information, visit www.HoustonFilmCritics.com.


About the Houston Film Critics Society
The 39 members of the Houston Film Critics Society are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their critiques and commentaries on film. The organization’s mission is to promote the advancement and appreciation of film in the Houston community and beyond.


2022 Houston Film Critics Society Nominees


Best Picture

The Banshees of Inisherin
Elvis
Everything Everywhere All at Once
The Fabelmans
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio
RRR
Tár
Till
Top Gun: Maverick
Women Talking

 

Best Director
The Banshees of Inisherin, Martin McDonagh
Elvis, Baz Luhrmann
Everything Everywhere All at Once, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert
The Fabelmans, Steven Spielberg
Tár, Todd Field
Women Talking, Sarah Polley

Best Actor – Leading Role
Austin Butler, Elvis
Tom Cruise, Top Gun: Maverick
Colin Farrell, The Banshees of Inisherin
Brendan Fraser, The Whale
Jeremy Pope, The Inspection


Best Actress – Leading Role
Cate Blanchett, Tár
Viola Davis, The Woman King
Danielle Deadwyler, Till
Emma Thompson, Good Luck to You, Leo Grande
Michelle Yeoh, Everything Everywhere All at Once


Best Actor – Supporting Role
Brendan Gleeson, The Banshees of Inisherin
Barry Keoghan, The Banshees of Inisherin
Ke Huy Quan, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Mark Rylance, Bones and All
Ben Whishaw, Women Talking


Best Actress – Supporting Role
Jesse Buckley, Women Talking
Kerry Condon, The Banshees of Inisherin
Jamie Lee Curtis, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Stephanie Hsu, Everything Everywhere All at Once
Janelle Monáe, Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery


Best Screenplay
The Banshees of Inisherin, Martin McDonagh
Everything Everywhere All at Once, Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert
The Fabelmans, Steven Spielberg and Tony Kushner
Tár, Todd Field
Women Talking, Sarah Polley and Miriam Toews


Best Animated Feature
Apollo 10 1⁄2: A Space Age Childhood
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio
Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
Turning Red


Best Cinematography
Avatar: The Way of Water, Russell Carpenter
Babylon, Linus Sandgren
Nope, Hoyte Van Hoytema
The Fabelmans, Janusz Kamiński
Top Gun: Maverick, Claudio Miranda


Best Documentary
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
Bad Axe
Fire of Love
Good Night Oppy
Navalny


Best Foreign Language Feature
All Quiet on the Western Front
Argentina, 1985
Close
Decision to Leave
RRR


Best Original Score
Babylon, Justin Hurwitz
The Banshees of Inisherin, Carter Burwell
Empire of Light, Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross
The Fabelmans, John Williams
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, Alexandre Desplat
Women Talking, Hildur Guðnadóttir 


Best Original Song
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Lift Me Up, Ludwig Göransson, Tems, Rihanna
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio, Ciao Papa, Alexandre Desplat, Guillermo del Toro, and Roeban Katz
RRR, Naatu Naatu, Kala Bhairava, M. M. Keeravani, and Rahul Sipligunj
Till, Stand Up, Jazmine Sullivan and Dermset “D’Mile” Emile II
Top Gun: Maverick, Hold My Hand, Lady Gaga, BloodPop, Ryan Coogler, and Benjamin Rice


Best Visual Effects
Avatar: The Way of Water
The Batman
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
RRR
Top Gun: Maverick


Best Stunt Coordination Team
The Batman
Everything Everywhere All at Once
RRR
Top Gun: Maverick
The Woman King


 Best Ensemble Cast
The Banshees of Inisherin
Everything Everywhere All at Once
The Fabelmans
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
Women Talking


Texas Independent Film Award
Acid Test
Apollo 10 1⁄2: A Space Age Childhood
Conception
Deep in the Heart: A Texas Wildlife Story
Facing Nolan

Sunday, June 28, 2020

"Ferris Bueller's Day Off" 2020 cast reunion video


Actor and singer (Frozen) Josh Gad reunited the Ferris Bueller's Day Off cast on YouTube for a discussion on the 1986 hit John Hughes film.

Back in 2009, I wrote a post about the original version of the film that nearly clocked in at three hours and included Bueller siblings. You can catch a few seconds in the original trailer at Ferris Bueller deleted scenes you haven't seen.

RELATED
- Ferris Bueller star Jennifer Grey posts sweet throwback photos ahead of cast reunion
- The great 80s Zoom reunion! How Josh Gad lured film giants out of lockdown


Friday, April 24, 2020

Houston film critics review "Movies on Lockdown" free for broadcast


With movie theatres shuttered, the Houston Film Critics Society is now posting at home viewing suggestions on its website to help movie fans endure lockdown, while offering free access to movie reviews from select Society members to broadcast stations across the US and Canada (the critics will also appear live).

This week, the Society “took to the skies” to promote its new website content, hanging a series of banners bearing movie references in high traffic areas.

“Our members have been seeing hundreds of movies every year for a long time”, says HFCS President Doug Harris, whose 'Jr. Mintz' film reviews have aired since the 1980’s on 101 KLOL. “From Truffaut to Tarantino, they can instantly recall obscure gems or forgotten favorites and share them with audiences”.

Check out the work of the 38 HFCS members at HoustonFilmCritics.com and contact Doug Harris to see which ones might be available to provide content in your market at no charge.

(This post was taken from a release sent to me by the HFCS)




Saturday, February 08, 2020

8th annual ReelAbilities Houston Film and Arts Festival 2020

30th ADA Anniversary Amplifies Annual Houston Festival Message of Inclusion: ADA Architect Lex Frieden Named Honorary Festival Chair

The eighth annual ReelAbilities Houston Film & Arts Festival, a free, citywide event that promotes inclusion through visual arts, films, speakers and a final-night concert, returns February 11-20. . The ten-plus day Festival, annually produced by the JFS Alexander Institute for Inclusion in collaboration with the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities, uses the arts as a vehicle to promote inclusion and celebrate the lives, stories and talents of people with disabilities, making an impact that lasts far beyond the Festival.

With the mission to foster inclusion, erase stigmas, change perceptions and create pathways to employment in the nation’s most diverse city, the Festival reaches thousands though numerous art forms. This year, ReelAbilities features 15 award-winning films, the UP Abilities speakers’ event, ReelMusic Concert, two art exhibits—including a Celebration Company art show—and educational programs in schools and workplaces around Houston. All art, film and music events are free.

“At its core a film festival and expanded in our city to include much more, ReelAbilities Houston is known as one of the most innovative among all others in the U.S.with yearlong initiatives anchored by the 10-plus day Festival, said ReelAbilities 2020 Houston Chair Dee Dee Dochen. “That this year is also the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act is an important milestone we are leveraging to amplify the Festival’s voice and reach.”

Dochen added, “We are particularly excited this year to announce that Houston’s own Lex Frieden, known as the architect behind the ADA who was with President George H.W. Bush at the bill’s signing, is the 2020 Festival’s honorary chair.”

“By setting a platform for people of all disabilities, both visible and invisible, to share their stories and talents, ReelAbilities Houston is truly a gift to Houston,” said Co-Chair Benjy Hershorn. “Through engaging speakers, music, film and visual arts, we learn empathy and gratitude, barriers come down,and our minds are opened to new possibilities.”

This year, ReeLAbilities features three preview events: The opening of Illuminating Dyslexia:A Multi-Sensory “Touch to See,” an art exhibit that will be on display through February 26 at the Evelyn Rubenstein JCC featuring the work of Dr. Stephanie Skolik; the January 30 Nobody’s Perfect –Achieving Inclusion, Diversity and Access with Marlee Matlin, produced in partnership with Congregation Emanu El; and a February 5 ReelWork place panel discussion and luncheon hosted by the Greater Houston In Collaboration With Host City Organizer Partnership that, moderated by Frieden, presents a panel of experts discussing companies’ efforts in creating cultures of inclusion by leveraging everyone's unique abilities.

ReelAbilities officially opens on February 11 with ReelPeople: UP Abilities,an evening showcasing three extraordinary speakers who will open windowsinto the world of disabilities with both intimacy and urgency. Captivating the audience will be J.R. Martinez, an Army veteran, burn survivor, actor,best-selling author and Dancing with the Stars winner; Rebecca Alexander, author, psychotherapist, group fitness instructor,advocate, and extreme athlete who is almost completely blind and deaf; and Darrius Simmons, a young musician born with three fingers on his right hand and one finger on his left who will play piano and engage in conversation with musician and producer Chris Walker. UP Abilities takes place at the A.D. Players at the George Theater; more information and tickets ($25) are available at www.reelabilitieshouston.org/upAbilities.php.

ReelArt, a gallery exhibit at the Center for Art and Photography at Celebration Company, will host an opening night reception on February 13 that features the works of visiting artist Mara Clawson, recipient of the VSA/Kennedy Center Emerging Young Artists with Disabilities award. Mara uses the pastels and iPad technology to convey her perception of the world and all are welcome to visit her artwork until April 17 at Celebration Company, 4131 South Braeswood. Operated by JFS Houston’s Disability Services Program, Celebration Company is a Houston-based entrepreneurial program that supports employees’ vocational goals while also providing life and social skills training to enable greater independence.

The Film Festival gets underway Sunday, February 16 with the critically acclaimed film, “The Peanut Butter Falcon”and featured speaker Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale, who will address ReelAbilities’ mission of inclusion.The film stars Zack Gottsagen, an actor with Down syndrome who plays Zak, a young man who runs away from a residential nursing home to follow his dream of attending the professional wrestling school of his idol, The Salt Water Redneck. A total of 15 Houston-curated films will be shown through Wednesday, February 19 at Edwards Greenway Grand Palace Stadium 24, 3839 Weslayan St., covering themes that are equal parts compelling, eye-opening, entertaining and even mystifying. Several films will be followed by interactive panel discussions to encourage audience dialogue. All films are captioned and audio described to be fully accessible. Admission and parking are free to attendees.

The Festival culminates Thursday, February 20 with ReelMusic, a celebratory night of jazz, rock and more, where accomplished musicians with disabilities join the ReelMusic house band on stage at White Oak Music Hall. Ernie Manouse, Houston Public Media PBS television host, will emcee the evening which gives many musicians their first chance to showcase their talents in a premiere venue. ReelMusic house band members are Kelly Dean, Andrew Leinhard, David Craig and Daleton Lee. Along with all ReelAbilities public events, Festival programming is additionally taken to dozens of schools, companies and organizations through ReelEducation and ReelWorkplace.

ReelAbilities Houston is made possible by lead sponsors Cornerstone Home Lending, Joan and Stanford Alexander and TIRR Memorial Hermann (Founding Partner). All film, art and music events are free; small fees for the two speakers events and ReelWorkplace are priced per event. Registration for all events is requested online at www.reelabilitieshouston.org.

(This post was taken from a release sent to me by ReelAbilities Houston)


Tuesday, December 31, 2019

The Rolling Stones’ Bobby Keys documentary Houston premiere


Feature Documentary: Every Nights A Saturday Night: The Bobby Keys Story — Houston Premiere

Where: 14 Pews - Houston Texas

When: Friday, Jan. 3rd. 14 Pews link here.

Producer Jeffrey Brown in attendance

Synopsis: Best friends with guitarist Keith Richards and considered the 6th Stone, Bobby Keys is best rock n roll saxophonist in the world. Well known for his work with, among others, The Rolling Stones, John Lennon, Joe Cocker, Eric Clapton and an endless number of Texas musicians.

Keys is especially recognized famously for his work on Brown Sugar and the album Exile on Main Street. Bobby’s story of a small town Texas kid who knew Buddy Holly, found the road out of town through music, played with Elvis and Donovan, achieved rock n roll stardom with the Stones only to crash and burn before a comeback again with the Stones has resonated.

Featuring: “featuring interviews with The Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards, Ron Woods, Charlie Watts, Mick Taylor as well as Texans Bill Gibbons (ZZ Top), Joe Ely and Jim Price, Dr. John, Bobby Whitlock, Ian McLagan, Jim Keltner, J.I. Allison, and more!

RELATED
Houston Film Critics Nominations Year’s best films 2019 (Jan. 2nd, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 7pm)



Thursday, December 19, 2019

Houston Film Critics Nominations Year’s best films 2019

Marriage Story and Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood Lead Houston Film Critics Nominations Year’s best films to be honored January 2


HOUSTON, TEXAS (December 15, 2019) — Marriage Story, Noah Baumbach’s intimate dissection of marital disappointment, joins Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino’s epic exploration of exaggerated egos, to lead the nominees for the 13th annual
awards of the Houston Film Critics Society.

Both films are nominated for six awards including Best Picture, with Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood also receiving a seventh nomination for Best Movie Poster Art. The prestigious film journalists annually honor the movie industry’s best work with winners to be announced
January 2 at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

Closely following the nomination leaders are 1917, The Farewell, The Irishman and Parasite, each nominated for five awards including Best Picture. Other contenders for this top award are Knives Out, Jojo Rabbit, Joker and Uncut Gems.

“We’re a passionate, adventurous group,” says Doug Harris, President of the organization. “This list of nominees represents the thousands of screening hours our members have devoted to uncovering the year’s most distinctive films so that we can bring the best of cinema from around the world to the audiences we serve.”

Because of the close voting for nominations, six actresses will compete for Best Actress for the first time, including Charlize Theron in Bombshell, Awkwafina in The Farewell, Renée Zellweger in Judy, Scarlett Johansson in Marriage Story, Saoirse Ronan in Little Women, and Lupita Nyong’o in Us. Five nominees are usually named. Johansson is also up for Best Supporting Actress for Jojo Rabbit, one of four other categories with six finalists emerging from tight contests, along with Best Foreign Language Film, Best Original Song and Best Documentary Feature.

Nominated for Best Actor are Leonardo DiCaprio for Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood, Adam Driver in Marriage Story, Eddie Murphy in Dolemite is My Name, Joaquin Phoenix in Joker and Adam Sandler in Uncut Gems.

Earlier this month, the HFCS announced its nominees for the Texas Independent Film Awards which honor films made in Texas. Bull, Building the American Dream, Nothing Stays the Same: The story of the Saxon Pub, Seadrift and Sleeping in Plastic are all up for these awards.

Winners in 18 categories will be presented at the January 2 event – starting at 7 p.m. – with special appearances from Roger Corman, who will be honored with a lifetime achievement award, as well as Ellyn Needham, wife of the late movie stunts pioneer Hal Needham, who will present the Society’s inaugural award for Best Stunt Coordination Team. An After Party, open to all awards ticket holders at no additional charge, will be staged in the Ultimate Ransom Room at the Hotel ZaZa Houston Museum District. Tickets are available through the ticket portal on the MFAH website, at https://www.mfah.org/calendar/houston-film-critics-society-best-2019-
awards/202001020630PM.

The Houston Film Critics Society’s 13 th Annual Movie Awards are underwritten in part by Leonard Courtright and the Keystone Family of Companies with additional support provided by Balcones Distilling.

About The Houston Film Critics Society
An After Party, open to all ticket holders at no additional charge, will be staged in the Ultimate Ransom Room at the Hotel ZaZa Houston Museum District. The forty-one members of the Houston Film Critics Society are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their critiques and commentaries on film. The organization’s mission is to promote the advancement and appreciation of film in the Houston community and beyond. For additional information and a list of members, visit www.HoustonFilmCritics.com.

2019 Houston Film Critics Society Nominations


Best Picture
1917; The Farewell; The Irishman; Jojo Rabbit; Joker; Knives Out; Marriage Story; Once Upon a
Time… in Hollywood; Parasite; Uncut Gems

Best Director
Bong Joon Ho, Parasite; Sam Mendes, 1917; Martin Scorsese, The Irishman; Quentin Tarantino,
Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood; Lulu Wang, The Farewell

Best Actor
Leonardo DiCaprio, Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood; Adam Driver, Marriage Story; Eddie
Murphy, Dolemite is My Name; Joaquin Phoenix, Joker; Adam Sandler, Uncut Gems

Best Actress
Awkwafina, The Farewell; Scarlett Johansson, Marriage Story; Lupita Nyong’o, Us; Saoirse
Ronan, Little Women; Charlize Theron, Bombshell; Renée Zellweger, Judy

Best Supporting Actor
Willem Dafoe, The Lighthouse; Anthony Hopkins, The Two Popes; Al Pacino, The Irishman; Joe
Pesci, The Irishman; Brad Pitt, Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood

Best Supporting Actress
Kathy Bates, Richard Jewell; Laura Dern, Marriage Story; Scarlett Johansson, Jojo Rabbit;
Florence Pugh, Little Women; Margot Robbie, Bombshell; Zhao Shuzhen, The Farewell

Best Screenplay
Knives Out; Marriage Story; Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood; Parasite; The Farewell

Best Cinematography
1917; The Irishman; The Joker; Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood; Parasite

Best Animated Feature
Frozen II; How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World; I Lost My Body; Missing Link; Toy Story 4

Best Original Score
1917; Joker; Little Women; Marriage Story; Us

Best Original Song
Glasgow, Wild Rose; Home to You, The Aeronauts; I Punched Keanu Reeves, Always Be My
Maybe; (I’m Gonna) Love Me Again, Rocketman; Into the Unknown, Frozen II; Stand Up, Harriet

Best Foreign Language Film
Atlantics; Corpus Christi; Les Miserables; Monos; Pain and Glory; Parasite

Best Documentary Feature
American Factory; Apollo 11; Biggest Little Farm; For Sama; Hail Satan; They Shall Not Grow Old

Texas Independent Film Award
Bull; Building the American Dream; Nothing Stays the Same: The Story of the Saxon Bar; Seadrift;
Sleeping in Plastic

Visual Effects
1917; Ad Astra; Avengers: Endgame

Best Stunt Coordination Team
Crawl; Ford v Ferrari; Furie; John Wick: Chapter 3 Parabellum; Shadow

Best Movie Poster Art
Birds of Passage; John Wick: Chapter 3 Parabellum; Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood; Parasite;
Portrait of a Lady on Fire; The Last Black Man in San Francisco;


Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Houston Film Critics Society Announces TIFA Nominees

Houston film critics and Balcones Distilling to honor Texas-made films on January 2


Five Texas-made films have been named by the Houston Film Critics Society (HFCS) as nominees for its annual Texas Independent Film Awards (TIFA).

Nominees for the Best Texas Film of 2019 are:

- Bull
- Building the American Dream
- Nothing Stays the Same: The Story of the Saxon Pub
- Seadrift
- Sleeping in Plastic

“We wrap a strong year for films made in Texas with an impressive list of nominees,” observes Joshua Starnes, TIFA Coordinator and past president of the HFCS. “With three films presented in documentary-style fashion and two additional narrative works, these filmmakers give us history, social commentary and drama, each imbued with a taste of the Texas spirit. We are honored to shine the spotlight on such deserving films and the talented people who made them.”

Over a dozen films were screened and selected by a nominating committee of HFCS members. Final voting by the Society’s general membership will take place this week. The winner, as well as the recipient of the Texas Independent Film Visionary Award, will be announced at the HFCS’ annual awards ceremony, Thursday, January 2, 2020, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Special guests include
director Roger Corman, who will be honored with a lifetime achievement award by the HFCS, as well as Ellyn Needham, wife of the late movie stunts pioneer Hal Needham, who will present the Society’s inaugural award for Best Stunt Coordination Team.

The HFCS created the TIFA in 2014 to spotlight the quality of independent film in Texas. Each year, the HFCS welcomes submissions of films shot in Texas that have been financed outside the major studio system by small investors and/or independent production companies. For the second consecutive year, the HFCS TIFA program will be underwritten by Balcones Distilling of Waco, Texas, makers of such award winning whiskies as Baby Blue, the Original Texas Whisky.

A reception for the nominees, open to all Awards Show ticket holders, will be held just before the event in the lobby of the Hotel YLEM from 5:00 to 6:00 PM, 8080 Main St. in the heart of the Texas Medical Center. HFCS thanks the YLEM for being the official hotelier of the TIFA.

Tickets for the HFCS 13th Annual Movie Awards are available through the ticket portal on the MFAH website. Visit https://www.mfah.org/calendar/houston-film-critics-society-best-2019-awards/202001020630PM

About The Houston Film Critics Society
The forty-one members of the Houston Film Critics Society are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their critiques and commentaries on film. The organization’s mission is to promote the advancement and appreciation of film in the Houston community and beyond. For additional information and a list of members, visit www.HoustonFilmCritics.com.

(This post was taken from a release sent to me by the Houston Film Critics Society)


Thursday, November 28, 2019

Houston Film Critics Society Announces New Award for Best Stunt Coordination Team

Ellyn Needham, wife of the late Hal Needham, will participate in the inaugural presentation


The magic of movie stunts will be celebrated by the Houston Film Critics Society (HFCS) with the debut of a new award for Best Stunt Achievement, presented to the stunt coordination team of a qualifying 2019 film. The first honoree of this newly established, annual tribute will be announced at the organization’s 13 th Annual Movie Awards ceremony on January 2, 2020.

“This is the perfect year to introduce our award for stunt coordination,” says HFCS President Doug Harris, “and we are thrilled to be among the first film critics associations to formally recognize this essential and perhaps most challenging element of the craft of movie-making.”

When considering the addition of this award category, HFCS members acknowledged the astonishing stunt work in several 2019 films including Avengers: Endgame, Ford v Ferrari, Gemini Man and John Wick: Chapter 3—Parabellum, and recalled the foundation of such
accomplishments in the groundbreaking work of industry pioneers Buster Keaton and Yakima Canutt, both born in 1895. The group further noted that one of the year’s most talked about films, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, centers around the adventurous life and work of a
fictional stunt man.

In association with this inaugural recognition, the HFCS has planned a tribute to Hal Needham, widely considered to be in the top echelon of Hollywood stuntmen. Ellyn Needham, widow of the legendary performer, will be on hand as the HFCS’s special guest.

The salute will spotlight Needham’s legendary work as a stunt man in movies and television, as well as his direction of stunt-filled films Smokey and the Bandit, Hooper and The Cannonball Run, among others. In 1986, Needham and William L. Fredrick received a Scientific and Engineering Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the design and development of the Shotmaker Elite camera car and crane. In 2012, he received an honorary Oscar from the Academy for what the organization described as “extraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement.”

The new Best Stunt Coordination Team will be the 18 th category honored by Houston Film Critics Society this year. In addition to its customary lineup, the organization recognizes the best movie poster design as well as the year’s worst film and presents the Texas Independent Film Award (TIFA) along with its companion, the TIFA Visionary Award.

The 13 th Annual HFCS ceremony will be held Thursday, January 2, 2020, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and is underwritten by the Keystone Family Companies with additional support by Balcones Distillers. Information on event tickets, local accommodations and underwriting opportunities is available from HFCS President Harris.

About the Houston Film Critics Society
The 40 members of the HFCS are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their critiques and commentaries on film. The organization, which actively promotes the advancement and appreciation of film in the Houston community, also offers annual scholarships to student film makers and journalism students with an interest in film critique. For additional information and a list of members, visit www.houstonfilmcritics.com.

(This post was taken from a release sent to me by the Houston Film Critics Society)


Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Houston film critics eagerly anticipate Oscar night

Possibilities for surprise captivate professionals who follow the movies


HOUSTON, TEXAS (February 18, 2019) — While the 2019 Oscars have already created surprise and controversy, members of the Houston Film Critics Society (HFCS) anticipate even more excitement when the winners are announced on February 24 during ABC’s broadcast of the 91st Annual Academy Awards.

“This year’s ceremony, celebrating a solid cinematic year, feels so overshadowed by controversy that it’s hard to know what to expect,” said HFCS member James Roberts of Glide Magazine. “From the hosting debacle, to the justifiable rage over the cut categories, to the scandal surrounding the director of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, the ceremony may be tainted.”

“I worry that the current wave of blatant commercialism and capitalism will continue to erode respect for the art and talent of moviemaking,” said HFCS president Doug Harris, of Third Rock Radio. “This is a time to applaud the work of filmmakers—not the promoters of plush toys, kids’ meals and adventure park tickets.”

Harris believes that The Academy and Oscar audiences may conclude that a host for the awards show has become an unnecessary distraction.

“I would be thrilled to see the presenters and winners show some respect and gratitude when they step up to the podium while dripping in diamonds in their designer duds and, absent of humility, show us a bit of charm,” Harris said.

Other HFCS members agree.

“I think it’s just fine that there is no Oscar host,” said T.J. Callahan of Houston’s AM 1070 KNTH. “After the opening number, they always become scarce.”

Dustin Chase, of Texas Art and Film, said that he hopes the show “isn’t the train wreck that reports suggest, from all the bad choices that have come to light. The Oscars should be a celebration of the best in film, not some television program produced to attract audiences that care nothing about cinematic art.”

Other HFCS members expressed a desire for change surrounding the speeches and statements given at the awards show.

Donna Copeland, also from Texas Art and Film, hopes that the Academy succeeds at “limiting the acceptance speeches which are always boring, though well prepared; thoughtful remarks at earlier awards shows this year, from such winners as Glenn Close and Christian Bale, are models to follow.”

Callahan contends that all political statements should be “outlawed” during the awards show. “Anyone who spouts off an opinion that has nothing to do with the movies should be fined,” she said.

Meanwhile, HFCS member Louis Parks describes a strong dislike for “forced levity and awkward efforts to address problems, real or imagined, that seem phony.”

It may come as a surprise that, as much as these critics love movies, not all of them intend on watching the awards show this year.

Alan Cerny of ComingSoon.net said that he won’t tune in on Oscar night because of “the infighting and bitterness that seems to take place every year.” Meanwhile, Hunter Lanier of Film Threat says that, as the Oscars have become a larger-scale television event, “The Academy Awards have catered more to the People Magazine crowd than to people who love movies. It's like that unbearable red-carpet pre-show has leaked into the main event.”

Still, to many critics, the “main event” offers sufficient appeal.

“I love that the winner for The Best Picture is not a given this year,” says Callahan, “and that Glenn Close came from behind to be the frontrunner. If she doesn’t win Best Actress, I’ll throw a tomato at the screen.”

Mark Schumann of Hearst Connecticut Media agrees, noting that, despite all the credit Close receives for her body of work, “she should win the Oscar for delivering the year’s most complex performance by an actress. As a lady who survives in the shadows, Close delivers a master class in the subtleties of nuance and expression. Not since ‘Fatal Attraction’ and ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ in the 1980s has she been so commanding in presence.”

Chase wonders, “Can Bradley Cooper pull an upset for Best Actor? And Spike Lee for Best Director? Can Rachel Weisz surprise in the Best Supporting Actress category? Can ‘First Man’ beat the juggernaut ‘Avengers’ for special effects? And can anything but ‘Roma’ win Best Picture?”

Schumann thinks it unlikely. “Some movies reach beyond their imagery to inspire us to take fresh looks at the world we experience and the mirrors we examine.”

Roberts agrees, saying, “‘Roma’ still feels like the film to beat for Best Picture, though personally, I’m still holding out hope that ‘The Favourite’, which recently won Best Picture at the 2019 Houston Film Critics Society Movie Awards, walks away as the big winner.”

Joe Kotisso, of KPFT 90.1 FM in Houston, says to “pray for Spike Lee if ‘Green Book’ wins Best Picture. The Academy can't let him lose to ‘Driving Miss Daisy’ twice.”

Looking ahead to the awards show this Sunday, Kotisso predicts that “the show will be long, yet feel like a blur you don't want to remember.”

Meanwhile, HFCS member Sally Hill is eager to watch the event unfold. “I’ve watched the Oscars as long as I can remember. I will always watch. I love the unexpected.”

Roberts offer a concise summary, with a note of promise. “It’s important to remember that Oscar night is meant to celebrate the artists and craftsman who enrich our lives through film. While the vibe surrounding the ceremony definitely feels off this year, it should still be an evening to remember.”

(from release)

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Doug Harris aka Jr. Mintz elected Houston Film Critics Society president

Broadcast Veteran Celebrates 35 years of Jr. Mintz Movie Reviews


HOUSTON, TEXAS (February 6, 2019) — Broadcast marketing and promotions specialist Doug Harris has been elected president of Houston Film Critics Society (HFCS) to serve a two year term extending to 2021.

The announcement coincides with the 35th anniversary of his movie review features, scripted and voiced under the alias of Jr. Mintz.

His film critic “side hustle” took off after an invitation from 101 KLOL afternoon host Harvey Kojan (aka Dr. K) to review films for the heritage AOR’s audience. KLOL’s GM, Pat Fant (now of RFC Media) is credited with creating his signature sign off, “When a movie stinks, you’ll smell it first with Jr. Mintz.”

Since those days, Jr. Mintz reviews have aired on The Buzz (KTBZ-FM), The New 93Q (KKBQ-FM) and News 92 FM.

A seven year regular on the “Dean and Rog Show” in Houston (on The Arrow then The Eagle), Mintz enjoyed eight years in syndication with the Connecticut Radio Network and was heard daily on eight New England stations.

An inductee of the Texas Radio Hall of Fame and a member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association, Harris/Mintz now shares his opinions on NASA’s digital radio station, Third Rock Radio.

About The Houston Film Critics Society

The thirty-seven members of the Houston Film Critics Society are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the country with their critiques and commentaries on film and their active efforts to promote the appreciation of film in the Houston community.

HOUSTON FILM CRITICS SOCIETY ELECTS NEW OFFICERS

Doug Harris to serve two-year term as president, Travis Leamons and Dr Donna Copeland to serve new roles

HOUSTON, TEXAS (February 6, 2019) — At the Houston Film Critics Society’s (HFCS) first meeting of 2019, the membership approved an uncontested slate of new officers who will immediately begin serving terms that will extend to early 2021.

Doug Harris was elected as the organization’s president and Travis Leamons as vice-president. Lisa Elin was reconfirmed as the group’s secretary while Dr. Donna Copeland will assume the duties of treasurer, previously handled by Travis Leamons.

HFCS member Mark Schumann has been appointed communications director for the organization.

After three consecutive terms, outgoing HFCS President Joshua Starnes will shift his focus to overseeing the group’s ongoing recognition of independent filmmakers and the annual presentation of the Texas Independent Film Awards. In tribute to his service, the HFCS presented him with a personalized director’s chair at their January meeting.

“This is going to be an incredible year for the HFCS,” Harris predicts. “We wrapped up 2018 with a spectacular, sold out awards show at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, began work on a revitalized website, and launched two new scholarship programs to recognize and support the next generation of filmmakers and journalists. Most importantly, our members collectively viewed over 10,000 films last year.”

Brief biographies of the new HFCS officers follow below:

Doug Harris (president) has reviewed movies in Houston for over 30 years as “Jr. Mintz”. His work first appeared in 1983 on Rock 101 KLOL, and subsequently on 94.5 The Buzz, The New 93Q, and News 92 FM. A regular for seven years on the “Dean and Rog Show” (93.7 The
Arrow, then 107.5 The Eagle), Mintz also enjoyed eight years in syndication with the Connecticut Radio Network and was heard daily on eight New England stations. A member of the Texas Radio Hall of Fame and Broadcast Film Critics Association, as well as a founding
member of the Houston Film Critics Society, he now shares his opinions on NASA’s digital radio station, Third Rock Radio.

Travis Leamons (vice-president) is a critic, cinephile, fitness enthusiast and avid collector of physical media (with more than 4,000 titles). He has written about film for more than a decade for outlets Inside Pulse, Examiner, BackstageOL, and Birth.Movies.Death. He also hosted over 100 episodes of the Houston Film Critics Society's weekly podcast “The Critics Circle”.

Lisa Elin (secretary) holds a degree in writing and is a certified coach specializing in cinema therapy and positive psychology. She’s been a member of the reviewing press since 2009 and weaves these concepts into her work, appearing in a variety of outlets including Reel Happiness, Examiner, We Got This Covered, and the HFCS podcast “The Critics Circle”. She also designs brain games for movie lovers.

Dr. Donna R. Copeland (treasurer) is a retired clinical psychologist who took a right turn in becoming a film critic seven years ago. Her reviews can be seen online at TexasArtFilm.net and on her blog at Dr. Donna’s Movie Reviews.


Tuesday, February 05, 2019

ReelAbilities Houston 2019 Film & Arts Festival

ReelAbilities Houston 2019 Film & Arts Festival Celebrates Talents, Lives of Individuals Living with Disabilities through the Arts



ReelAbilities Houston Film & Arts Festival, a free, citywide event that promotes inclusion through visual arts, films, UP Abilities speakers and a ReelMusic concert, returns February 12 – 21, 2019 for its seventh year. The nation’s most multifaceted ReelAbilities Festival in scope, the ten-day Festival showcases and leverages the unique contributions of people who live with disabilities, with the mission to foster inclusion, erase stigmas, change perceptions and create pathways to employment in the nation’s most diverse city.



JFS Alexander Institute for Inclusion, in collaboration with the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities, has produced ReelAbilities Houston Film & Arts Festival annually since launching it here in 2013.

“The goal of this Festival is to utilize the arts to help change deep-seated social stigmas often associated with those who live with visible and invisible disabilities,” said ReelAbilities Houston Chair Susan Farb Morris. Co-Chair Dee Dee Dochen added, “Truly a gift to Houston, the Festival drives ‘inclusion’ home through multiple experiences over ten days. With engaging speakers, music, film and visual arts, we’re confident everyone will find an event that speaks to their passions.”



ReelAbilities, founded in New York City in 2007 and now presented in 14 cities, is the largest festival in the country dedicated to presenting world-class films by and about people with different disabilities. The Houston Festival is considered the most expansive festival of its kind in the country, featuring a Celebration Company visual art exhibit, 13 feature and documentary films (full-length and shorts), the UP Abilities speakers event, ReelMusic Concert, and educational programs at schools and workplaces around the city. Through these events, ReelAbilities Houston reaches thousands of participants with its message of inclusion.



The Festival will kick off Tuesday, Feb. 12, 6:15-9 p.m., at A.D. Players at the George Theater with ReelPeople: UP Abilities, an evening showcasing three extraordinary speakers who live with disabilities. They are: Jen Bricker, an accomplished gymnast and aerial performer born without legs; Erik Weihenmayer, the first person who is blind to successfully climb Mount Everest and complete the Seven Summits; and Amanda Boxtel, who, paralyzed from the waist down, bridges human mobility with exoskeletons and bionic technology. More information and tickets are available at www.reelabilitieshouston.org/upAbilities.php.



ReelArt, a gallery exhibit at the Center for Art and Photography at Celebration Company, will open Feb. 13, 6-8 p.m., with a reception featuring the works of visiting artist Ezra Roy, a nationally recognized mixed-media artist who has Down syndrome, and more than 20 Celebration Company artists who live with varying cognitive disabilities. Operated by JFS Houston’s Disability Services Program, Celebration Company is a Houston-based entrepreneurial program that supports employees’ vocational goals while also providing life and social skills training to enable greater independence. The exhibit will remain open through April 19 at Celebration Company, 4131 South Braeswood.



The Film Festival gets underway Sunday, Feb. 17 with Opening Night award-winning documentary “Far From the Tree.” Based on Andrew Solomon’s New York Times best-selling book of the same name, the film examines the experiences of families where parents and children are profoundly different from one another in a variety of ways. Thirteen Houston-curated films will be shown through Wednesday, Feb. 20 at Edwards Greenway Grand Palace Stadium 24, 3839 Weslayan St., covering themes that are equal parts compelling, eye-opening, entertaining and even mystifying. Several films will be followed by interactive panel discussions to encourage audience dialogue. All films are captioned and audiodescribed to be fully accessible. Admission and parking are free to attendees.



The Festival culminates Thursday, Feb. 21 with ReelMusic, a free, all-inclusive night of jazz, rock, and more, where a house band comprised of some of Houston’s top professional musicians join artists living with disabilities on stage at White Oak Music Hall, 2915 North Main, 7-9:30 p.m. Ernie Manouse, Houston Public Media PBS television host, will emcee the evening which gives many musicians their first chance to showcase their talents in a premiere venue. ReelMusic house band members are Kelly Dean, Andrew Leinhard, David Craig and Daleton Lee.



Thanks to the support of lead sponsors Bristow Group and TIRR Memorial Hermann (founding partner), the film and arts events are free; UP Abilities is $18 to attend. Registration is requested via www.reelabilitieshouston.org. All events are open to the public.



ReelAbilities Houston is also supported by local and national foundations, corporations, individual sponsors and in-kind donors. To learn more about becoming a ReelAbilities sponsor, please contact JFS Corporate Sponsorship Manager Tynesha Brown at TyneshaBrown@jfshouston.org or 713-667-9336 ext. 209.



Tues., Feb. 12: ReelPeople: UP Abilities

A.D. Players at The George Theater, 5420 Westheimer Rd, 77056 | 7-9 p.m. | $18

Wed., Feb. 13: ReelArt

The Center for Art and Photography at Celebration Company, 4131 S. Braeswood, 77025 | 6-8 p.m. | Free

Sun.-Wed., Feb 17-20: ReelAbilities Films

Edwards Greenway Grand Palace Stadium 24, 3839 Weslayan St, 77027 | Free admission and free parking

Feb. 17: “Far From the Tree,” 7-9 p.m.— Documentary about the experiences of families in which parents and children differ from one another in a variety of ways.

Feb. 18: “Perfectly Normal for Me,” 1-2 p.m.— Kids with physical and developmental disabilities attend a dance program.

Feb. 18: Matinee short features, 4-5:30 p.m.

“Mr. Connolly Has ALS”—A beloved high school principal continues to lead, despite rapidly losing his abilities to ALS.
“Unstuck: An OCD Kids Movie”—Children with OCD and their loved ones describe their experiences.
“Torture by Sound”—An exploration of Misophonia, a disorder where everyday sounds causes immense pain and agitation.

Feb. 18: “Mind/Game: The Unquiet Journey of Chamique Holdsclaw,” 7-9 p.m.— Basketball phenom Chamique Holdsclaw shares her struggle with mental illness.

Feb. 19: Matinee short features, 4-5:30 p.m.

“Leo & Carol”—Leo, a ‘vertically challenged’ comedian, is about to marry Carol, a 5’5” tall teacher.
“Lethe”—A young amnesiac woman pieces together fragmented memories while running from pursuers.
“Just Go!”—Just, a double amputee, chases the thieves who stole his crush’s purse.

Feb. 19: “By Stanley, For Stanley,” 7-9 p.m.— Both born without arms dozens of years apart, Stanislaw becomes an important mentor to young Stas.

Feb. 20: “The Rider,” 4-5:30 p.m.— A young cowboy is injured in a tragic riding incident and must undertake a search for a new sense of identity.

Feb. 20: “Deej,” 7-9 p.m.—A high school senior on the autism spectrum navigates the college admission process.

Thurs., Feb. 21: ReelMusic

White Oak Music Hall, 2915 N. Main Street, 77009 | Doors open 6:30 p.m.; Concert 7–9:30 p.m. | Cash bar and complimentary lite bites | Free admission



-----------------------------------------------------------



ABOUT REELABILITIES

ReelAbilities is the largest festival in the country dedicated to promoting inclusion for people with disabilities through the arts. The mission of ReelAbilities is to utilize the arts as a vehicle to both educate and change perceptions about individuals living with disabilities. Launched in New York in 2007, Houston is one of 14 cities expanding the festival throughout the country. JFS Alexander Institute for Inclusion, founded by Joan and Stanford Alexander and a division of JFS Houston’s Disability Services, is the festival’s host organizer. The Alexander Institute seeks to foster a community that includes all individuals by eliminating the stigma associated with disabilities. Lead support is provided by Bristow Group and TIRR Memorial Hermann (Founding Partner). The Festival is produced in collaboration with The Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities, and over 50 community organizations provide additional support as collaborating partners.



ABOUT JFS ALEXANDER INSTITUTE FOR INCLUSION

Founded at Jewish Family Service through the generosity of Joan and Stanford Alexander in 2007, the JFS Alexander Institute for Inclusion works to foster a community that includes all individuals, creates and sustains new and existing disability services and strives to eliminate the stigma associated with disabilities through educational programming, collaboration and advocacy. ReelAbilities Houston is its signature city wide event, but programs are offered throughout the year to bring workshops to corporations on Disability Etiquette and practical support for hiring employees with disabilities. More information at www.alexanderinstituteforinclusion.org.



ABOUT CELEBRATION COMPANY

Operated by JFS Houston’s Disability Services Program, Celebration Company is a Houston-based entrepreneurial program composed of more than 20 adult artists living with disabilities who create art and photography which are displayed in a retail gallery devoted to the art and creations of artists with disabilities. With a strong belief in self-determination, Celebration Company uses the community around us to support the employee’s vocational goals while also providing life and social skills training to enable greater independence. For more information or to view products or art created at Celebration Company, visit www.celebrationcompany.org.



ABOUT UP ABILITIES

UP Abilities is an evening with three extraordinary speakers with disabilities who share their personal journeys. The evening includes opportunities for the audience to also visit with the speakers in smaller groups. UP Abilities is a partnership with the UP Experience, which curates and designs custom events providing world-class speakers so that audiences can be educated and inspired by exceptional stories and ideas. For more information visit www.reelabilitieshouston.org/upAbilities.php.


(This post is a release from ReelAbilities Houston)


Thursday, January 10, 2019

ESPN 97.5 host "Crashes" Houston Film Critics' Awards 2018

I told you about the 12th Annual Houston Film Critics Society Awards earlier this month at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, but what I didn't mention was how the Houston media crashed it!

Photo by Phyllis Hand

When Third Rock Radio's movie critic Jr. Mintz (alter ego of KLOL - broadcast veteran Doug Harris) and cult movie actress Dona Speir announced "The Happytime Murders" as the 2018 "Best Worst Movie" category, ESPN 97.5's afternoon host Barry Laminack stepped from the wings to unofficially accept the award on behalf of Melissa McCarthy.

Photo by Phyllis Hand

Now apparently in the decade plus these awards have been happening, no winner of that category has dared to show up!

Turns out the gag was set up in advance with Gow Media (the event sponsor and Laminack's employer) with full knowledge of the show's producers who thought that the radio host's experience as a standup comic would bring something extra to the show.

Judging from the reaction of the sold out crowd, they were right.

Among the evening's other surprises were an unannounced appearance by KHOU's Great Day Houston host Debra Duncan, brought onstage by Leonard Courtright, President of the Courtright Family Companies, and the presence and participation of all five consuls general representing the countries whose films were nominated by the HFCS in the Best Foreign Film Category.





Saturday, January 05, 2019

The Favourite Wins Top Houston Film Critics Society Award


HOUSTON, TEXAS (January 4, 2019) — The Favourite – director Yorgos Lanthimos’ irreverent look at the life of Britain’s Queen Anne in the 18 th century – won top honors at the Houston Film Critics Society’s 12 th Annual Movie Awards presented January 3 rd at a
ceremony at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH).

The Houston Film Critics Society (HFCS), also recognized Rachel Weisz as Best Supporting Actress for the film as well as Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara for its screenplay.

“We are thrilled to honor such a creative and entertaining film,” says Joshua Starnes, President of the organization. “The Favourite uses a broad visual approach, and a deep appreciation for its characters, to rethink the costume drama. Who would have thought a
movie about royals could be so fun?”

A near capacity crowd in the MFAH’s Brown Auditorium Theatre braved unseasonably cold weather to enjoy an evening that included a live performance of the five nominated songs and a dramatic presentation of the HFCS’s Award for Best Foreign Film.

Consuls general, representing each of the five countries whose films were nominated in this category, were on hand to deliver greetings in the language of their respective nations to an audience that included movie fans, local filmmakers, studio representatives and HFCS members.

Other highlights of the evening included a passionate acceptance speech by Outstanding Local Cinematic Achievement honoree Damir Catic and expressions of gratitude to the prestigious body of film journalists received from award winners Toni Collette (HFCS Best Actress winner for Hereditary) and Paul Lambert (HFCS Best Visual Effects winner for First Man).

Roma also received three awards from the Society including Best Foreign Language Film and two honors for Alfonso Cuarón, Best Director and Best Cinematography, a rare double distinction for a movie maker.

The Society named Christian Bale Best Actor for his memorable interpretation of Vice President Dick Cheney in Vice, Toni Collette as Best Actress for her striking turn in the thriller Hereditary and Mahershala Ali as Best Supporting Actor for his rich portrayal of
a pianist touring the South in Green Book. Wes Anderson’s Isle of Dogs was named Best Animated Film and Won’t You Be My Neighbor won Best Documentary.

“For the Houston Film Critics Society, the annual awards presentation culminates our year-long commitment to interpret and review achievements we experience on the screen,” continues Starnes. “This year’s Oscar-style awards presentation celebrated the achievements of the year in the manner those honors deserve. The evening was Houston at its best.”

Included in the awards each year are honors for films shot in Texas, with The Standoff at Sparrow Creek receiving the Texas Independent Film Award (TIFA) as the best feature made in the state and filmmaker Andrew Bujalski receiving the TIFA Visionary Award
for Support the Girls.

The critics also poked fun at the year’s lesser achievements by naming The Happytime Murders as the “best worst film” of 2018. Actress Dona Speir, a fixture in a series of 1990 action movies produced by Andy and Arlene Sidaris, traveled to Houston at the invitation of the HFCS to participate in this playful “non-salute”. Following the awards ceremony, HFCS members and industry notables toasted the
evening’s winners at reception in the Monarch Terrace at the Hotel ZaZa.

All HFCS winners are selected by working film journalists on television, radio, online and in print who reach millions of people each week across the United States with their commentaries on film.

Here is a full list of award winners:

2018 Houston Film Critics Society Award Winners
Best Picture: The Favourite
Best Director: Alfonso Cuarón, Roma
Best Actor: Christian Bale, Vice
Best Actress: Toni Collette, Hereditary
Best Supporting Actor: Mahershala Ali, Green Book
Best Supporting Actress: Rachel Weisz, The Favourite
Best Screenplay: Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara, The Favourite
Best Cinematography: Alfonso Cuarón Roma
Best Animated Film: Isle of Dogs
Best Documentary: Won't You Be My Neighbor?
Best Foreign Language Film: Roma
Best Score: Nicholas Britell, If Beal Street Could Talk
Best Song: Shallow, A Star Is Born
TIFA Feature: The Standoff at Sparrow Creek
TIFA Visionary Award: Andrew Bujalski, Support the Girls
Best Poster: BlacKkKlansman
Best Visual Effects: First Man
Best Worst Film: The Happytime Murders

The consular corps members present for the announcement of the Best Foreign Film Award were:

Takeshi Sugiura, Vice Consul, Consulate-General of Japan in Houston
Ggochnim “Nim” Bak Consul of the Korean Consulate in Houston.
Imanol De la Flor, Consul General of Mexico in Houston
Robert Rusiecki, Consul General, Consulate General of the Republic of Poland
Astrid Marklund, Consul General of Sweden in Houston.

Members of the HFCS are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their commentaries on film. The organization also actively promotes the
advancement of film in the Houston community.

The 12 th Annual Houston Film Critics Society’s Movie Awards were underwritten by The Courtright Family Companies with promotional assistance from Gow Media’s ESPN 97.5 FM and SportsMap 94.1 FM. The Texas Independent Film Award (TIFA), an HFCS exclusive, was funded in part by Balcones Distilling, the award-winning whisky distiller based in Waco, Texas.

(This post was taken from a release sent to me by the Houston Film Critics Society)



Sunday, January 14, 2018

Houston ReelAbilities Film and Arts Festival Feb. 12-22, 2018


Houston-based ReelAbilities Film and Arts Festival, a city-wide festival promoting inclusion and celebrating the lives and talents of people living with disabilities, returns for its sixth year Feb. 12-22, 2018.

The event, anchored by a five-day film festival, also features a speaker series, live music jam session, art exhibit, educational tours to local schools and seminars at local offices, to educate the community and to help change perceptions about individuals with varying levels of abilities. The festival has grown to be the largest of its type in the U.S.

“With Houston being such a diverse community, we’re excited to put people living with disabilities at the forefront of the conversation with the hopes that this festival will educate others about the country’s largest minority,” said ReelAbilities Film and Arts Festival Chair Vikki Evans. “Everyone has their own real ability that makes them unique. ReelAbilities Film and Arts Festival proves that no matter what your background or level of ability is, your potential to make an impact is limitless,” continued Co-chair Susan Farb Morris.

ReelAbilities, founded in New York in 2007 and now presented in 14 cities, is the largest festival in the country dedicated to presenting award-winning films by and about people with different disabilities. The film portion of the festival will be held at Edwards Greenway Grand Palace Stadium 24 from Feb. 18-22, where movies will be screened and followed by interactive panels to encourage audience discussion. Admission and parking will be free to attendees.

Houston is considered one of the most innovative cities hosting ReelAbilities, as this festival utilizes multiple avenues to further educate and inform members of the community beyond strictly film. For instance, ReelArt, a gallery exhibit at the Center for Art and Photography at Celebration Company, will kick off the festival on Feb. 12 from 6-8 p.m., and stay on display throughout the 11-day festival. The event will feature a meet-and-greet with visiting artist Brandon Lack, a talented artist from Austin who has Down syndrome, and more than 20 exhibiting Celebration Company artists living with disabilities. Operated by JFS Houston’s Disability Services Program, Celebration Company is a Houston-based entrepreneurial program composed of 20 adult artists living with disabilities who create art for both a leisure activity and a life skill.

ReelMusic, an all-inclusive jazz and blues music jam where professional musicians invite artists with disabilities to perform, will close the festival on Feb. 22 at White Oak Music Hall from 7-9 p.m. Dee Dee Dochen, Houson jazz vocalist, will chair and emcee the high-energy musical evening.

Another unique offering to ReelAbilities Houston is ReelPeople: UP Abilities – a series of intellectually-stimulating discussions with three thought leaders from across the world on Feb. 15 from 7-9 p.m. This year’s event at HCC West Loop South Campus will feature Mandy Harvey, a respected American singer-songwriter who is deaf and was a 2017 finalist on America’s Got Talent; Joseph Bensmihen, an advisor and groundbreaking advocate for people with disabilities, born with cerebral palsy; and Caroline Casey, a Dublin-based serial social entrepreneur behind the global #valuable campaign to bring inclusion to the workplace.

Tickets will be available online for $18 at www.reelabilitieshouston.org.

In part to city organizer JFS Alexander Institute for Inclusion, and lead support from The Bristow Group and TIRR Memorial Hermann (founding partner), the film and arts events are free and open to the public. Maria Town, Director of the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities, also joins the Honorary Committee of ReelAbilities Houston 2018.

ReelAbilities Houston is made possible thanks to the generous support of foundations, corporations, individual sponsors and in-kind donors. To learn more about becoming a ReelAbilities sponsor, please contact JFS Chief Development Officer Rachel Davis at
rdavis@jfshouston.com or 713-667-9336 ext. 213. Guests may reserve seats for Houston’s sixth annual ReelAbilities Film and Arts Festival at www.reelabilitieshouston.org.

February 18 - 22: ReelAbilities Film Festival: The 2018 festival will screen 17 films beginning February 18 through February 22 at Edwards Greenway Grand Palace Stadium 24. Each film features an interactive event to foster dialogue between the audience, the filmmaker, parents, professionals, or persons with disabilities, and to explore the subjects depicted in the film.

Admission to all films and parking is free.

This year’s films include:

February 18

Evening Feature: Full Length (Evening film begins at 7:00 PM)

• Swim Team
In this touching film, parents of one boy with autism from New Jersey form a competitive swim team, recruiting a diverse group of teens on the autism spectrum and training them with high expectations and zero pity. Director: Director Laura Stolman, 100 min, USA, English


February 19

Matinee Feature: Short Length (Matinee films begin at 1:00 PM)

• 4 Quarters
Follow the road to success of the Texas School for the Deaf Rangers, the only high school football team serving students with hearing impairments, as they take on a competitive league. Director: Cody Broadway, Documentary, 17 min, USA, English

• Dancing on Wheels
After a tragic accident, former ballerina Kitty Lunn taught herself how to dance again using her wheelchair.
Director: Qingzi Fan, Documentary, 10 mins, USA, English

• Picked
From a young age, we are shaped into behaving only as our communities deem permissible. This expectation of assimilation follows us into adulthood, where we make larger and more impactful choices. When a young girl is asked to pick a pumpkin on a school field trip, she is met with confusion and reprimand from her peers and teacher – under the guise that this admonishment is in her best interest. Her process and eventual selection is a great indication of how she will make more important decisions later in her life.
Director: Kelsey Amelia Snelling, Narrative, 8 mins, USA, English

• Still Kicking
Lucky Animaly, a 23-year-old Ghanaian, is a multi-talented energetic young man born with leg deformity who plays soccer with an able-bodied soccer team. Lucky strikes against all odds to become a world soccer star in Ghana.
Director: Osei Owusu Banahene, Documentary, 5 min, Ghana, English

Matinee Feature: Full Length (Matinee film begins at 4:00 PM)

• Nise – The Heart of Madness
An indomitable psychiatrist refuses to employ electroshock therapy and confronts Brazil’s mental health establishment in the 1950s. Based on a true story, Nise da Silveira pioneered the use of art therapy as an effective tool to treat patients with mental health issues. Director: Roberto Berliner, Narrative, 108 min, Brazil, Portuguese

Evening Feature: Full Length (Evening film begins at 7:00 PM)

• Prison Dogs
Prison Dogs focuses on the impact of a groundbreaking program that gives two of the most marginalized populations in our society – prison inmates and veterans with PTSD – a second chance. The Puppies Behind Bars Program allows prison inmates to care for and train puppies as service dogs for injured veterans.
Director: Perri Peltz, Documentary, 71 min, USA, English

February 20

Matinee Feature: Full Length (Matinee film begins at 4:00 PM)

• Blind Date
Technology is transforming the way we date and find love. Mobile apps like Tinder, and websites like OKCupid wet our appetite for instant visual gratification. But, if you’re single and blind, you face a distinct set of challenges. A digital divide has emerged between sighted and blind people in search of love. Blind Date is a short documentary that follows three blind New Yorkers on their quests for love in the digital age. Directors: Nicole Ellis & Maya Albanese, Documentary, 35 min, USA, English

Evening Feature: Full Length (Evening film begins at 7:00 PM)

• Looking at the Stars
What does it mean to ask someone to Look at the Stars? For Geyza, a prima ballerina who is blind, it means the journey of her life. This feature documentary invites us into her world, and of a special ballet academy in Sao Paulo, Brazil, the only company in South America of its kind.
Director: Alexandre Peralta, Documentary, 89 min, USA, English

February 21

Matinee Feature: Full Length (Matinee film begins at 4:00 PM)

• At Eye Level
When 11-year-old Michi finds his estranged father’s address, he can’t believe his luck. When they meet and Michi discovers that his father, Tom, has dwarfism, Michi and Tom are forced to confront both disability and fatherhood head on.
Directors: Joachim Dollhopf and Evi Goldbrunner, Narrative, 100 min,Germany, German

Evening Feature: Full Length (Evening film begins at 7:00 PM)

• My Hero Brother
A group of young people with Down syndrome embarks on a demanding trip through the Indian Himalayas accompanied by their typically abled brothers and sisters. Unresolved conflicts and the complexities of growing up with a child who has Down syndrome in the family come to the surface, while a heartwarming and special closeness develops among the siblings as they deal with formidable physical and emotional challenges. The difficult trials and poignant relationships set against the richly colorful backdrop of India open new horizons and deepen our understanding of the challenges young adults with disabilities and their families face.
Director: Yonatan Nir, Documentary, 78 min, Israel, Hebrew

February 22

Matinee Afternoon of Shorts (Short matinee film begins at 4:00 PM)

• Andy Barrie: The Voice
A former Candaian radio host, Andy Barrie, finds a new voice in battling Parkinson’s disease.
Director: Lana Slezic, Documentary, 13 min, Canada, English

• Behind the Clip: Little Foxes
Lauren Watson is a talented aerial artist with incomplete paraplegia. She has been using the art form as a fun way to get her body moving again after being partially paralyzed from the waist down as a result of a car accident in 2000.
Director: Samuel Bright, Documentary, 3 min, Australia, English

• I Am Able
In 1994, Frederick Ndabaramiye’s home country of Rwanda was torn apart. In 100
days, over one million people were killed in a horrific genocide. Four years later, the same Interhamwe rebels who spearheaded this genocide pulled over the bus that Frederick was taking to visit his aunt. What happened next would change his life forever.
Director: Isaac Seigel-Boettner, Documentary, 12 min, USA, English

• On Beat
A look inside the family life of deaf parents, their hearing children and the music that unites them.
Director: Cheng Zhang and Reid Davenport, 7 min, Documentary, English

• Sky
Nine-year-old Sky feels powerless and misunderstood among his hearing classmates. He thinks the outsiders don’t understand him, but does he understand them?
Director: Loes Janssen, Documentary, 15 min, Netherlands, Dutch

• Well Done
A young man goes to visit an art museum and is fascinated by a symbolic picture.
Director: Riccardo Di Gerlando, Narrative, 11 min, Italy, Italian

• February 22: ReelMusic: An All-Inclusive Jazz and Blues Jam: Professional jazz and blues musicians invite musicians with disabilities to jam with the band at White Oak Music Hall on from 7-9 p.m. (doors open at 6:30 p.m.).
2915 N Main St,
Houston, TX 77009

• Ongoing: ReelEducation: In addition to ReelAbilities’ city-wide public events, the festival also brings free programming during the school day to Houston area schools so that the message of inclusion and the importance of arts is being communicated to the city’s youth – through film, music, and fine art.

• Ongoing: ReelWorkplace: Hiring managers, staff, and future employees attend company-sponsored, in-house ReelWorkplace seminars featuring films, speakers, and etiquette workshops about various topics of inclusion.

(This post taken from a release sent to me by Houston ReelAbilities Film and Arts Festival)


Monday, January 01, 2018

11th Annual Houston Movie Awards honoring “Mattress Mack"


Houstonians will get a glimpse of awards season glamour on the evening of Saturday, January 6th , when the Houston Film Critics Society presents its 11 th annual awards ceremony. The event-- the only one of its kind staged by a regional film critics’ organization in the US-- will be hosted by CW 39/NewsFix personality Grego at the Midtown Arts and Theater Center Houston (MATCH) performance complex, located at 3400 Main St. in downtown Houston.

The festivities, which are open to the public, will commence at 7:00 pm and will feature awards for excellence in motion pictures for 2017. Leading the list of HFCS nominated films are The Shape of Water, with nods in seven categories and Lady Bird with five.

“Each year, the Houston Film Critics Society follows a thorough screening process to identify the best of the year’s films,” says Joshua Starnes, president of the organization. “Our annual awards ceremony lets us honor the best as we invite the community to celebrate the magic of film.”

The evening’s agenda, which includes an Oscar-style presentation of movie clips and winners in multiple categories, will feature a salute to the career of the late Harry Dean Stanton in a tribute delivered by HFCS member and Variety magazine contributor Joe
Leydon
.

The Houston Film Critics’ Society will also present their annual Humanitarian Award to Jim McIngvale, whose tireless efforts for the victims of Hurricane Harvey captured the attention, admiration and appreciation of the world. In selecting “Mattress Mack” for this honor, the HFCS noted with fondness his production of the 1992 action film “Sidekicks”. The movie, filmed in Houston, starred Jonathan Brandis and Chuck Norris and featured cameos by legendary Houston radio personalities Mark Stevens and Jim Pruett.


A silent auction, featuring unique movie collectibles, will be staged in the lobby of the theatre. The list of items includes a now beautifully framed Sidekicks movie poster originally uncovered by members of the HFCS during their inventory of over 8,000 posters found in storage on the second floor of the historic Evelyn Theatre in Dumas, Texas.

Tickets are $15 (plus a modest ticketing fee) and are available for online purchase at https://matchouston.org/discipline/film

The 11th Annual Houston Film Critics Society’s Movie Awards are underwritten by Leonard Courtright of Allied Siding and Windows, with promotional assistance from Gow Media’s ESPN 97.5 FM and SportsMap 94.1 FM, in cooperation with CW 39 and NewsFix.

ABOUT THE HFCS
The 34 members of the HFCS are working film journalists on television, radio, online and in traditional print. Together, they reach millions of people each week across the United States with their critiques and commentaries on film. The organization, which also actively promotes the advancement of film in the Houston community, hosts a weekly, one hour radio show and podcast series on Radio Brave, an international digital broadcast platform. Visit www.houstonfilmcritics.org for details about the awards or the Society.

11 th ANNUAL HFCS MOVIE AWARDS Silent Auction Items

A silent auction will be staged in the lobby of MATCH 4 with proceeds benefiting the HFCS’ cinematic programs. Bidding will begin when the doors open and will conclude 20 minutes after the end of the show. Payment by check, cash or credit card is accepted. Winning bidders who are not present when the auction ends may arrange delivery of their items during the week of January 8th.

Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgandy Bobbleheads, in original boxes Set of five (5) bobbleheads featuring each of the movies original, main characters: Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell), Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate), Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd), Brick Tamland (Steve Carell), and Champ Kind (David Koechner).

The set, which was a promotional gift from the movie studio in 2004 to film critics, has been in the original owner’s possession since that time.

Manchester by the Sea, Limited Edition poster, matted and framed
Signed by the film’s director and screenwriter Kenneth Lonergan (who also wrote the screenplays for Gangs of New York, Analyze This, Howard’s End, and others).
Manchester by the Sea was nominated for 6 Academy Awards in 2016, and was the Oscar winner for
Best Actor (Casey Affleck) and Best Screenplay (Lonergan).

This print was a studio gift in 2016 to film critics and was framed after delivery. Lonergan’s message to critics is included on the back of the frame.

La La Land Framed limited edition print (from a series of 600)
La La Land was the most heralded commercial film of the 2016 awards season. It won in every category for which it was nominated at the 74 th Golden Globe Awards (with a record-breaking seven wins) and received 11 nominations at the 70th Annual British Academy Film Awards (winning 5). It received 14 nominations at the 89 th Academy Awards, tying the record for most nominations with All About Eve and Titanic. Although La La Land won six Oscars, it most famously did NOT win Best Picture. It was mistakenly announced as such by the show’s hosts in what will surely be remembered as one of the most controversial moments in Oscar history.

This print was a gift from Lionsgate Entertainment to critics in 2016. Documentation of the print’s
provenance is included on the back of the frame.

Sidekicks Movie Poster Lobby-sized, framed.
This 1992 action film was directed by Aaron Norris and starred Jonathan Brandis and Chuck Norris The cast also included Beau Bridges, Joe Piscopo, Richard Moll, and Mako. It was shot in Houston and featured cameos by legendary Houston radio personalities Mark Stevens and Jim Pruett of KLOL. Sidekicks was produced by Gallery Films, Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale’s first foray into the movie business. The poster was uncovered (unframed) by members of the HFCS during their inventory of over 8,000 posters found in the attic of the historic Evelyn Theatre in Dumas, Texas.

Dinner with Jonathan Sandys
, Great-Grandson of Sir Winston Churchill
Enjoy a lively discussion of the three Churchill era films released in 2017, over a three course meal with wine at a Houston restaurant. Package includes eating for four guests in addition to Mr. Sandys.

Stack o’ Screenplays
An assortment of screenplays from 2017 films, in paperback form, offered as a single lot.

Titles include:
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
The Post
The Shape of Water
War for the Planet of the Apes
Darkest Hour
Baby Driver
Dunkirk
Hostiles
Movie-themed Coffee Table Books
Assorted hard bound books, presented as promotional gifts to critics during the 2017 pre-awards season.
Offered as a single lot.
Titles include:
Mother
Dunkirk
Okja
Bladerunner 2049
Now You’re in the Sunken Place
Alexander Payne: His Journey in Film
The Shape of Water