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Showing posts with label Atlanta Film Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlanta Film Festival. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Miley Cyrus Heading to Georgia

Governor Sonny Perdue announced today that Savannah will be the filming location for the upcoming Disney film, The Last Song. The movie is expected to bring approximately 250 jobs to the state.

“I signed the 2008 Entertainment Industry Investment Act in support of our efforts to recruit film, music and digital entertainment projects to Georgia,” said Governor Perdue. “These industries are thriving and growing, boosting the state’s economy and employing thousands of Georgians.”

The script was written by noted author Nicholas Sparks. The production of the film will take place in Savannah and other nearby coastal locales. Julie Anne Robinson will direct The Last Song which is expected to start production in Georgia in mid-June and be completed by mid-August, 2009. Producer Dara Weintraub also produced another film in Savannah called The Clearing, which starred Robert Redford, Willem Dafoe and Helen Mirren.

Georgia’s new, more competitive incentives offer a 20 percent tax credit for qualified productions, which are then eligible for an additional 10 percent tax credit if they include an animated Georgia promotional logo within the finished product. The incentive covers more than just the film and television industries. The program also offers credits for commercials and music videos, as well as the first incentive in the nation to cover other areas of development including animation, interactive entertainment and video game development.

Nine feature films, two television series and one television pilot were produced in Georgia in the first quarter of 2009. A Sony Pictures produced television series began production in Georgia in April and three feature films are currently in production. Seven more feature films are slated for the state in the coming months.

The Film, Music and Digital Entertainment office, a division of the Georgia Department of Economic Development, assists local, national and international entertainment industries with expertise and resources. The staff points movie production companies to Georgia’s highly-trained crews, state-of-the-art facilities, and diverse locations. Georgia’s temperate climate and easy access afforded by Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, are also factors that attract the industry’s interest.

Since the inception of the office in 1973, more than 600 major motion pictures, independent films, television series and pilots, and TV movies have filmed on location in the state. As a result, over $5 billion dollars has been generated for the state’s economy.

Miley Cyrus is expected to star in the film.

(Governor's office news release)

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Female electric chair victim featured at film fest


Lena Baker (Georgia Encyclopedia.org)

The only woman ever to die in Georgia's electric chair - a victim of racial injustice in the Jim Crow-era South - is the focus of a movie that makes its world premiere this month at the 32nd annual Atlanta Film Festival.

"This is one I had to do first," said veteran actor Ralph Wilcox, 57, who wrote and directed "The Lena Baker Story" and produced it at a new 22,000 square-foot movie studio in rural southwestern Georgia.
"This film ... dealt with four issues that are really continuing today - abuse, addiction, the death penalty and the fourth and foremost is our faith," Wilcox said. "It was her faith that gave Lena her courage and fortitude."
The film is one of more-than 150 movies, documentaries and animations selected from some 1,600 submissions to be featured at the festival, which runs April 10-19 at Atlanta's Landmark Midtown Art Cinema, said festival executive director Gabriel Wardell.
"One of the reasons we choose it for opening night is that it is such an accomplished film, especially for a first-time director," said Wardell. "It's elegantly shot. It really captures the period, but also the beautiful landscape in southwest Georgia - cotton fields and sunsets. And it also has top-notch performances from a remarkable cast, especially Tichina Arnold in the lead role."
Arnold is cast in the role of Baker, a black housekeeper in Cuthbert who became romantically involved with an abusive, pistol-toting, gristmill operator, who was white. Baker and the miller, played by actor Peter Coyote, are portrayed as drunks, mired in an interracial relationship that was taboo in the segregated South.

Tichina Arnold

Others featured in the film are Beverly Todd as Baker's mother, Michael Rooker as the sheriff who arrested Baker and Chris Burns, the miller's son. All three urged Baker to break off the relationship with her hateful lover.

At her trial, Baker, a mother of three, said the miller held her against her will during a drinking binge and that she shot him with his own pistol after he grabbed an iron bar and threatened to hit her.

The jury of 12 white men didn't buy her self-defense argument. During the one-day trial on Aug. 14, 1944, her court-appointed lawyer didn't call a single defense witness.

The jury found her guilty of first-degree murder and a white judge sentenced her to die.

Her attorney filed an appeal, but withdrew from the case, leaving the appeal to be dismissed.
Baker's final words, shortly before her execution at the Reidsville State Penitentiary on March 5, 1945, were, "What I done, I did in self-defense. I have nothing against anyone ... I am ready to meet my God."

An undertaker buried her body behind the small country church near Cuthbert, where she had attended services and was a choir member. Her grave remained unmarked for more than five decades, until the congregation raised $250 for a cement slab.

For decades, Lena Baker was buried in an unmarked grave behind Mt Vernon Baptist Church, outside of Cuthbert, Ga. A simple headstone now designates her final resting place. (Muthoni Muturi, NPR)

At the request of Baker's family, the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles granted her a pardon in 2005. The board did not find her innocent of the crime, but instead found that the decision to deny her clemency in 1945 was a grievous error.

Wilcox, who is black and spent more than six years in Africa producing documentaries on the work of missionaries, said he hopes the movie will give young people a better understanding of history and help them make responsible decisions in a world where atrocities and disasters still occur.
"I didn't want to vilify anyone ... or the system that was bad," said the Milwaukee-born filmmaker. "There are the villains, but also the saviors, black and white. It is a lesson in the evolution of how we go trough tyranny and struggle. It tells a story about a chapter in our history from which we can evolve."
Upon his return from Africa, Wilcox said he had a dream of making movies in rural Georgia. He eventually found a home in Colquitt, about 180 miles southwest of Atlanta, which already had a thriving arts council famous for its folk play, "Swamp Gravy," a Cultural Olympiad Event during the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

With grants and donations, he built a multi-million-dollar movie studio in a former cotton patch, and like the arts council, hopes to use filmmaking as a vehicle for economic development in a rural area that has struggled to attract traditional industries.

The Lena Baker movie will be in distribution by the end of the year, Wilcox said.

GPB News Team: