Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
DON'T MISS NEW SHORTS FROM BALLARD'S AWARD-WINNING FILMMAKERS
Everyone is invited to a screening of new work by students in the Ballard High School Video Production Program. The Showing will be on Saturday, February 8 and Thursday, February 13 at 7 pm in the Ballard High School auditorium. The screening will include short comedies and dramas, advertisements, news features, and music videos. Some of the work has recently won regional and national awards. Tickets ($10 for adults and $5 for students) will be sold at the door.
Funds raised will benefit students in the Video Production Program. Each spring, students in the program travel to Los Angeles to tour college schools of film and television, visit program alumni enrolled in these colleges or working in the industry, and meet with film and television professionals. Your ticket purchase or donation will make this trip possible for all accepted students and provide additional production equipment.
Funds raised will benefit students in the Video Production Program. Each spring, students in the program travel to Los Angeles to tour college schools of film and television, visit program alumni enrolled in these colleges or working in the industry, and meet with film and television professionals. Your ticket purchase or donation will make this trip possible for all accepted students and provide additional production equipment.
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
BALLARD HIGH SCHOOL FILMMAKER WINS NATIONAL ARTS AWARD
The National YoungArts Foundation has awarded Lucy Harstrick a Merit Award in Cinematic Arts in recognition of the “exceptional artistic achievement” evident in her work. The award comes with a college recommendation from this prestigious organization. The YoungArts program identifies and supports young talent in the areas of music, theater, visual arts, photography, writing, and cinematic arts (motion picture). Lucy’s production was selected for honors from more than 11,000 submissions nationwide through a blind adjudication process by a nationally and internationally renowned panel of judges, master teachers, and artists.
A third year student in Ballard’s Video Production Program, Lucy plans to study filmmaking in college next year. She pitched her idea for the winning project to the Advanced Video Production class last spring. It was selected for production by her classmates, and Lucy worked with Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen ('13, now at NYU), Josh Vredevoogd ('14), and Kiana Wyld ('14) to realize her concept. Titled Song for Anna, the music video tells a nuanced story that could suggest a couple trying to get together – or trying to break up.
Song for Anna will have its premiere with other recently awarded works by filmmakers in the Ballard High School Video Production Program at The Showing on Saturday, February 8 or Thursday, February 13 at 7 p.m. in the BHS auditorium. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for students. All proceeds support students in the Program.
A third year student in Ballard’s Video Production Program, Lucy plans to study filmmaking in college next year. She pitched her idea for the winning project to the Advanced Video Production class last spring. It was selected for production by her classmates, and Lucy worked with Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen ('13, now at NYU), Josh Vredevoogd ('14), and Kiana Wyld ('14) to realize her concept. Titled Song for Anna, the music video tells a nuanced story that could suggest a couple trying to get together – or trying to break up.
Song for Anna will have its premiere with other recently awarded works by filmmakers in the Ballard High School Video Production Program at The Showing on Saturday, February 8 or Thursday, February 13 at 7 p.m. in the BHS auditorium. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for students. All proceeds support students in the Program.
Monday, November 04, 2013
BALLARD FILM STUDENTS WIN FIVE-STATE FESTIVAL
For the ninth straight year, students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program are winners in Fresh Film Northwest. This competitive regional festival is coordinated by the Northwest Film Center in Portland, Oregon. It accepts entries from filmmakers ages 13 to 19 in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington.
The music video Stop Pretending by Marlene Anderson, Khasbold Bataa, Gabe Fabens, Zach Green & Lorenzo Rossi won the Creative Self-Expression Award for “outstanding achievement in cinematic storytelling.” The video features the original song of the same title by Rossi for his band Yellow Peril and concerns relationships that are held together by social expectations. An Honorable Mention was awarded to the music video Song for Anna, by Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Lucy Harstrick, Josh Vredevoogd & Kiana Wyld. It tells an ambiguous story of romance and loss. Finally, winner of the Heart Award for “authenticity, originality, and humane treatment of a subject” is the visual story The Eye of the Beholder by Walker Evans, Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen & Brian VanWagenen. It takes a subjective look at the destructive impact of fashion marketing.
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
Sydney Jarol (Class of 2011) with Rebecca Fons of the Chicago International Film Festival
After three productive, enjoyable, and undeniably
educational years in the Ballard Video Production Program, I was lucky enough
to be granted a generous scholarship to Columbia College Chicago. Columbia had
been my first choice, both because it was located in a new and exciting city,
and because it’s film program is one of the best in the country (it recently
made #14 on the Hollywood Reporter’s Top
25 Film Schools of 2013). It would not have been possible for me to attend
without such a scholarship, and I am extremely grateful for all the
instruction, both constructively critical and supportive, that I received from
Mr. Lawrence during my time in the video program. It was this guidance that
inspired me to create the best work possible, and therefore helped me to build
a portfolio strong enough to obtain this award.
Since starting at Columbia College, I have been involved in
several projects, filling a wide variety of roles including producer, writer,
director, editor, script supervisor, sound designer, and production assistant.
It has taken me a while to decide where to focus myself within the world of
film production, but I have finally decided on sound design. Sound is something
that I never even considered as an option when I thought about working in film,
but my first sound class changed my mind completely. I had never realized how
much fun sound could be, and once I came to the conclusion that I was perfectly
capable of working the equipment and software, it rapidly became my favorite
aspect of the filmmaking process. I hope to pursue a career in post-production
audio, but I also plan to learn how to work on location sound.
In addition to coursework, I have done my best to
continually be involved in extracurricular activities that will ultimately help
me achieve my career goals. I have worked as a lab assistant in the
post-production center at Columbia, as well as in a teaching assistant position
for an art in schools program with Chicago Public Schools. And this past
summer, I spent five weeks working as a film instructor for a summer camp at a
Chicago elementary school, which was both challenging and rewarding.
But the best, and most exciting experience thus far has been
my internship with the Chicago International Film Festival. Beyond the actual
process of filmmaking, being a part of making film festivals happen is another
passion of mine, and I had been dreaming about working with the festival ever
since I first arrived in Chicago and learned of its existence. For two years I
volunteered with the festival each fall, and then last spring I was granted an
internship working with the Education Outreach Coordinator, Rebecca Fons. In my
internship position, I helped to plan and carry out the 2013 CineYouth Festival, in addition to other
duties such as assisting with education screenings and general festival events.
Although internships generally last only a semester, I was asked to return for
the fall, which means that I will be a part of the force behind the 49th
Chicago International Film Festival itself, and I could not be more delighted.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
BALLARD HIGH SCHOOL PRODUCERS HONORED AT REGIONAL EMMY AWARDS
Each year, the Northwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences presents High School Awards of Excellence to celebrate the most outstanding high school productions from Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska. The productions are nominated, and the winners determined, by a jury of Academy members. When the envelopes were opened at the 50th Annual Regional Emmy Awards on June 15, students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program won 3 of the four categories in which they had been nominated.
Here are the winners, by category:
Community/Public Service Announcements:
Not Even Once by Sam Baldwin, Paris Burhen, Brian Cropp & Gabriel Tagulao
Long-Form, Fiction:
Godsend by DJ McCoy
Photographer/Editor:
Dream House by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
This marks the seventh year in a row that Ballard High School video producers have been winners at the event.
Sunday, June 02, 2013
AND THE NOMINEES ARE...
The Northwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) has announced nominees for the Northwest High School Awards of Excellence. These awards celebrate the most outstanding productions from five Northwest states: Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska. Productions are nominated by NATAS industry professionals. Students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program earned eight nominations. The winners will be announced on June 15 at the 50th Annual Regional Emmy Awards ceremony.
Ballard’s nominations span four categories, reflecting the diverse skills students learn in the program. These are the nominations by category.
Community/Public Service Announcements:
Anti-Littering by Tristram Fetters, DJ McCoy & Sage Borlo
Not Even Once by Sam Baldwin, Paris Burhen, Brian Cropp & Gabriel Tagulao
Long-Form, Fiction:
Godsend by DJ McCoy
Long-Form, Non-Fiction:
Impact by Kenton King, Jacob Scott & Mackenzie Wright
My Little Brony by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt
Photographer/Editor:
Dream House by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
Nordic Heritage Museum by Julian Amrine & Joshua Vredevoogd
Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott
This makes the seventh year in a row that Ballard High School video producers have been nominated. Last year they received 7 nominations and won the categories of Long Form, Fiction and Photographer/Editor.
Ballard’s nominations span four categories, reflecting the diverse skills students learn in the program. These are the nominations by category.
Community/Public Service Announcements:
Anti-Littering by Tristram Fetters, DJ McCoy & Sage Borlo
Not Even Once by Sam Baldwin, Paris Burhen, Brian Cropp & Gabriel Tagulao
Long-Form, Fiction:
Godsend by DJ McCoy
Long-Form, Non-Fiction:
Impact by Kenton King, Jacob Scott & Mackenzie Wright
My Little Brony by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt
Photographer/Editor:
Dream House by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
Nordic Heritage Museum by Julian Amrine & Joshua Vredevoogd
Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott
This makes the seventh year in a row that Ballard High School video producers have been nominated. Last year they received 7 nominations and won the categories of Long Form, Fiction and Photographer/Editor.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
NORTHWEST HIGH SCHOOL FILM FESTIVAL HONORS BHS FILMMAKERS
Students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program won 15 awards and honors across six different categories at the 15th annual Northwest High School Film Festival at the Cinerama Theater in downtown Seattle. This is the largest and longest running festival for high school filmmakers in the Puget Sound region. This year 370 productions were entered in the competition from 24 high schools.
Perhaps the biggest prize of the festival is the “J-Dogg” Scholarship. The award was established in 2011 by the family of Justin Amorratanasuchad, the gifted Ballard High School filmmaker whose career was tragically cut short by an accident during his second year of college. The memorial scholarship gives upwards of $5,000 each year toward the college education of a festival winner preparing to pursue a degree in film and television production. This year, the award was presented to BHS Video senior Vann Fulfs. In the fall, Vann will be studying film production at Columbia College in Chicago – a program ranked by the Hollywood Reporter as one of the best in the world.
The festival was judged by a panel of industry professionals and college media professors. The event was organized by the Media Educators for Excellence Team (MEET) and sponsored by Adobe, Advanced Broadcast Solutions, the Art Institute of Seattle, Keith Rivers Films, Glazier’s Camera, Key Code Media, and Shoreline Community College. For more information on the NWHSFF, visit www.nwhsff.weebly,org.
There will be a screening of new work by students in the BHS Video Production Program (including one of this year’s prize-winning shorts) on Thursday, May 23 at 7 p.m. in the BHS auditorium. Tickets to “The Showing” are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door.
Ballard’s Northwest High School Film Festival winners:
AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE
Dramatic Narrative - Suspense
Sundown
Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt, Jacob Scott
News Feature
Viking Robotics
Ben Fuesel, Bryan Quandt
Public Service Announcement
The Door
Liam Moser, Cecilia Orozco-Chavez, Kimi Rutledge
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Comedic Narrative
An Appetite for Knowledge
Gabe Fabens, Nick Hauger, Lorenzo Rossi
Great Mimes Think Alike
Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong, Kiana Wyld
Hollyday
Katie Brostrom, Kelsey Mendenhall, Sara Timmons
Commercial
A Night to Remember
Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Ana Krafchick, Cooper Rickards
Documentary
Deep Down
Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Kaila Lafferty, Oona Lowe
My Little Brony
Vann Fulfs, Brian Quandt, Taylor Martin
Dramatic Narrative
Eye of the Beholder
Walker Evans, Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Brian VanWagenen
News Feature
Ballard Cooks
Milo Adams, Coleman Anderson, Carlos Caceres Martinez, Leo Pfeifer
It Takes Balls to Juggle
Brian Cropp, Lily , Raven Two Feathers
PSA/Anti-Ad
Know Your Limit
Joseph Downey, Grace Turnell, Robyn Wrey
Not Even Once
Sam Baldwin, Paris Burhen, Brian Cropp, Gabe Tagulao
Real Nordic Heritage
Julian Amrine, Joshua Vredevoogd
Perhaps the biggest prize of the festival is the “J-Dogg” Scholarship. The award was established in 2011 by the family of Justin Amorratanasuchad, the gifted Ballard High School filmmaker whose career was tragically cut short by an accident during his second year of college. The memorial scholarship gives upwards of $5,000 each year toward the college education of a festival winner preparing to pursue a degree in film and television production. This year, the award was presented to BHS Video senior Vann Fulfs. In the fall, Vann will be studying film production at Columbia College in Chicago – a program ranked by the Hollywood Reporter as one of the best in the world.
The festival was judged by a panel of industry professionals and college media professors. The event was organized by the Media Educators for Excellence Team (MEET) and sponsored by Adobe, Advanced Broadcast Solutions, the Art Institute of Seattle, Keith Rivers Films, Glazier’s Camera, Key Code Media, and Shoreline Community College. For more information on the NWHSFF, visit www.nwhsff.weebly,org.
There will be a screening of new work by students in the BHS Video Production Program (including one of this year’s prize-winning shorts) on Thursday, May 23 at 7 p.m. in the BHS auditorium. Tickets to “The Showing” are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door.
Ballard’s Northwest High School Film Festival winners:
AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE
Dramatic Narrative - Suspense
Sundown
Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt, Jacob Scott
News Feature
Viking Robotics
Ben Fuesel, Bryan Quandt
Public Service Announcement
The Door
Liam Moser, Cecilia Orozco-Chavez, Kimi Rutledge
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Comedic Narrative
An Appetite for Knowledge
Gabe Fabens, Nick Hauger, Lorenzo Rossi
Great Mimes Think Alike
Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong, Kiana Wyld
Hollyday
Katie Brostrom, Kelsey Mendenhall, Sara Timmons
Commercial
A Night to Remember
Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Ana Krafchick, Cooper Rickards
Documentary
Deep Down
Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Kaila Lafferty, Oona Lowe
My Little Brony
Vann Fulfs, Brian Quandt, Taylor Martin
Dramatic Narrative
Eye of the Beholder
Walker Evans, Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Brian VanWagenen
News Feature
Ballard Cooks
Milo Adams, Coleman Anderson, Carlos Caceres Martinez, Leo Pfeifer
It Takes Balls to Juggle
Brian Cropp, Lily , Raven Two Feathers
PSA/Anti-Ad
Know Your Limit
Joseph Downey, Grace Turnell, Robyn Wrey
Not Even Once
Sam Baldwin, Paris Burhen, Brian Cropp, Gabe Tagulao
Real Nordic Heritage
Julian Amrine, Joshua Vredevoogd
Thursday, May 09, 2013
BALLARD HIGH SCHOOL FILMMAKERS SCORE AT FILM COMPETITION
Three shorts by ten Ballard High School video students have won two of the major prizes and an Honorable Mention at the Dominique Dunne Film Competition in Colorado Springs. The competition was one of the first events in the nation to showcase the work of young filmmakers. It awards only four prizes: two for Documentary, and two for Dramatic Narrative. Only schools with outstanding film programs were invited to participate, and each school was limited to just four entries.
Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe won Second Prize in the Documentary Category for Deep Down, the story of Alessandro Gilmini’s near-death experience in an ice cave. In the Dramatic Category, Walker Evans, Elise Neroutsos, Jamie Vitz-Wong & Sam Weller won Second Prize for their sinister short The Craft. The Honorable Mention went to the suspenseful short Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott.
The students will receive cash prizes for each honor, as well as written critiques from the prestigious jury, including producer Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. (of The Samuel Goldwyn Company and Samuel Goldwyn Films), actor/director Griffin Dunne (An American Werewolf in London, After Hours) and producer/ director/actor Ed Sherin (Law & Order).
Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe won Second Prize in the Documentary Category for Deep Down, the story of Alessandro Gilmini’s near-death experience in an ice cave. In the Dramatic Category, Walker Evans, Elise Neroutsos, Jamie Vitz-Wong & Sam Weller won Second Prize for their sinister short The Craft. The Honorable Mention went to the suspenseful short Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott.
The students will receive cash prizes for each honor, as well as written critiques from the prestigious jury, including producer Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. (of The Samuel Goldwyn Company and Samuel Goldwyn Films), actor/director Griffin Dunne (An American Werewolf in London, After Hours) and producer/ director/actor Ed Sherin (Law & Order).
Thursday, April 18, 2013
BALLARD HIGH SCHOOL FILMMAKERS FEATURED AT INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL
Seven short films by seventeen students in the Ballard High School Video Production Program have been named Official Selections of the National Film Festival for Talented Youth (NFFTY). This competitive festival showcases outstanding work by filmmakers age 22 and younger. NFFTY is a rare opportunity for high school students to share the spotlight with college students from our nation’s best film schools. This year, NFFTY received over 700 entries from 30 states and 20 countries. NFFTY opens at the Seattle Cinerama Theater on Thursday, April 25 and continues through Sunday, April 28 at the Seattle Center.
Official Selections for NFFTY are determined by a jury of professional filmmakers. These short films by Ballard High School video students have been selected for screening.
Deep Down by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe
Dream House by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
Great Mimes Think Alike by Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong & Kiana Wyld
Making a Mark by Brittney Blokker, Helen Miller & Sam Weller
My Little Brony by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt
Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott
In addition, Leo Pfeifer’s short 74, produced last summer before he entered the BHS Video Production Program, was also selected.
Festival screenings are built around unifying themes. The Northwest Scene screening (noon on Sunday, April 28 at the SIFF Uptown 1) is said to feature “the best of the West” by the Northwest’s “extremely talented young filmmakers.” This year, half of these films are by Ballard High School Video Production students.
BHS also has a team competing in the 48-hour Film Off. Each school’s team has two days to produce a short from start to finish. The winner (selected in part by the audience) will win funds for their school’s production program. You can catch the 48-Hour Film Off – and cast your vote - on Saturday, April 27 at 11:30 at the SIFF Uptown 1.
In addition to screenings and awards, NFFTY includes forums on filmmaking. For a complete schedule of events, show times, and ticket information, visit www.nffty.org.
NFFTY itself is the brainchild of Ballard High School video alumnus Jesse Harris (’04). Harris made history in 2004 when Living Life, the feature film he had written and directed as a senior project, was purchased by FilmMates and given a theatrical release. (It opened in Seattle in April, 2005.) The festival was co-founded by Harris, Kyle Seago (’07) – then a Ballard High School Video student - and Jocelyn RC (Bellevue High School, ’07). A growing list of sponsors and partners paved the way for this seventh annual event.
Official Selections for NFFTY are determined by a jury of professional filmmakers. These short films by Ballard High School video students have been selected for screening.
Deep Down by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe
Dream House by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
Great Mimes Think Alike by Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong & Kiana Wyld
Making a Mark by Brittney Blokker, Helen Miller & Sam Weller
My Little Brony by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt
Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott
In addition, Leo Pfeifer’s short 74, produced last summer before he entered the BHS Video Production Program, was also selected.
Festival screenings are built around unifying themes. The Northwest Scene screening (noon on Sunday, April 28 at the SIFF Uptown 1) is said to feature “the best of the West” by the Northwest’s “extremely talented young filmmakers.” This year, half of these films are by Ballard High School Video Production students.
BHS also has a team competing in the 48-hour Film Off. Each school’s team has two days to produce a short from start to finish. The winner (selected in part by the audience) will win funds for their school’s production program. You can catch the 48-Hour Film Off – and cast your vote - on Saturday, April 27 at 11:30 at the SIFF Uptown 1.
In addition to screenings and awards, NFFTY includes forums on filmmaking. For a complete schedule of events, show times, and ticket information, visit www.nffty.org.
NFFTY itself is the brainchild of Ballard High School video alumnus Jesse Harris (’04). Harris made history in 2004 when Living Life, the feature film he had written and directed as a senior project, was purchased by FilmMates and given a theatrical release. (It opened in Seattle in April, 2005.) The festival was co-founded by Harris, Kyle Seago (’07) – then a Ballard High School Video student - and Jocelyn RC (Bellevue High School, ’07). A growing list of sponsors and partners paved the way for this seventh annual event.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
BALLARD HIGH SCHOOL FILMMAKERS WIN TOP AWARDS
On Saturday, February 23, six Ballard High School video students won two of the top prizes at the 17th Annual Derek Freese Youth Media Film Festival at Temple University in Philadelphia.
The award for Best Documentary went to Deep Down by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe. As a fourteen-year-old Ballard High School student, Alessandro Gelmini was exploring an ice cave with a friend when it collapsed, burying both boys beneath piles of shattered ice and debris. Deep Down tells the story of his rescue and recovery through interviews with Gelmini, his mother, and an emergency response professional, as well as news footage and expressive use of light and sound.
Best Editing went to Great Mimes Think Alike, a comedic short by Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong & Kiana Wyld. The story (by Kiana Wyld) concerns a mime content to earn his living on Market Street until a rival mime stakes a claim nearby. The short uses visual storytelling techniques so well it’s easy to see what characters are thinking. In good mime tradition, nobody says a word.
Seven other works by students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program had also been nominated: three others for Best Documentary and two others for Best Editing, as well as two for Best Fiction. The festival invites competition from high school filmmakers throughout the nation and is judged by professors from Temple University’s renowned School of Film and Media Arts, acclaimed filmmakers, and members of the Derek Freese Foundation.
The award for Best Documentary went to Deep Down by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe. As a fourteen-year-old Ballard High School student, Alessandro Gelmini was exploring an ice cave with a friend when it collapsed, burying both boys beneath piles of shattered ice and debris. Deep Down tells the story of his rescue and recovery through interviews with Gelmini, his mother, and an emergency response professional, as well as news footage and expressive use of light and sound.
Best Editing went to Great Mimes Think Alike, a comedic short by Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong & Kiana Wyld. The story (by Kiana Wyld) concerns a mime content to earn his living on Market Street until a rival mime stakes a claim nearby. The short uses visual storytelling techniques so well it’s easy to see what characters are thinking. In good mime tradition, nobody says a word.
Seven other works by students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program had also been nominated: three others for Best Documentary and two others for Best Editing, as well as two for Best Fiction. The festival invites competition from high school filmmakers throughout the nation and is judged by professors from Temple University’s renowned School of Film and Media Arts, acclaimed filmmakers, and members of the Derek Freese Foundation.
Monday, February 18, 2013
NINE BHS FILMS NAMED FINALISTS IN NATIONAL FESTIVAL
Nine works by students in the Ballard High School Video Production Program have been named finalists in the 17th Annual Derek Freese Youth Media Film Festival. This prestigious festival draws competition from high school filmmakers throughout the nation and is judged by professors from Temple University’s renowned School of Film and Media Arts, acclaimed filmmakers, and members of the Derek Freese Foundation.
The finalists will be screened and prizes awarded in each category during the festival from 4 – 7 pm on Saturday, February 23rd at Temple University’s Annenberg Hall in Philadelphia.
Four of the honored productions can be seen in The Showing this Friday, February 22 at 7 pm in the Ballard High School auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door. The funds raised will help send students to Los Angeles to tour the film and television industry and related college programs.
Here are Ballard’s finalists:
Nominated for Best Documentary:
Deep Down by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe
Impact by Kenton King, Jacob Scott & Mackenzie Wright
My Little Brony by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt
Unbroken by Marlene Andersen, Adhem Morsi & Cooper Rickards
Nominated for Best Editing:
Dream House, a dramatic short by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
Great Mimes Think Alike, a comedic short by Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong & Kiana Wyld
Sunlight, a dramatic short by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen & Kenji Takada-Dill
Nominated for Best Fiction:
The Number by Alex Guettler, Ana Krafchick & Helen Miller
Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott
The finalists will be screened and prizes awarded in each category during the festival from 4 – 7 pm on Saturday, February 23rd at Temple University’s Annenberg Hall in Philadelphia.
Four of the honored productions can be seen in The Showing this Friday, February 22 at 7 pm in the Ballard High School auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door. The funds raised will help send students to Los Angeles to tour the film and television industry and related college programs.
Here are Ballard’s finalists:
Nominated for Best Documentary:
Deep Down by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe
Impact by Kenton King, Jacob Scott & Mackenzie Wright
My Little Brony by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt
Unbroken by Marlene Andersen, Adhem Morsi & Cooper Rickards
Nominated for Best Editing:
Dream House, a dramatic short by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman
Great Mimes Think Alike, a comedic short by Will Slater, Michael Vitz-Wong & Kiana Wyld
Sunlight, a dramatic short by Isaiah Hoban-Halversen & Kenji Takada-Dill
Nominated for Best Fiction:
The Number by Alex Guettler, Ana Krafchick & Helen Miller
Sundown by Vann Fulfs, Bryan Quandt & Jacob Scott
Monday, February 04, 2013
FILM AND VIDEO STUDENTS PREMIERE NEW WORK
Everyone is invited to The Showing, a screening of new work produced first semester by students in the Video Production Program. The Showing will be Friday, February 8 at 7 p.m. in the Ballard High School auditorium. It will be repeated on Friday, February 22. The program will include short comedies and dramas, news features, advertisements, and documentaries. Three of these works recently won Creative Self-Expression Awards for “outstanding achievement in cinematic storytelling” from the Fresh Film Northwest Festival at the Portland Art Museum.
Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students, and will be sold at the door. All proceeds benefit students in the Video Production Program.
Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students, and will be sold at the door. All proceeds benefit students in the Video Production Program.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
BALLARD FILM STUDENTS WIN REGIONAL FESTIVAL
On Saturday, November 17, four productions by students in the BHS Video Production Program were winners of Fresh Film Northwest at the Portland Art Museum. This competitive regional festival is coordinated by the Northwest Film Center in Portland, Oregon. It accepts entries from filmmakers ages 13 to 19 in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. Every winning entry from Washington involved Ballard High School students.
After their work was screened for the festival audience, each student received a Creative Self-Expression Award for outstanding achievement in cinematic storytelling. The BHS winners were the documentaries Deep Down (by Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen, Kaila Lafferty & Oona Lowe) and My Little Brony (by Vann Fulfs, Taylor Martin & Bryan Quandt) as well as the short drama Dream House (by Ariahna Ghormley, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman). Also, Ballard video students Dayan Flynn-Walsh, Vann Fulfs, Ana Krafchick, John Paul Umbao and Isaiah Hoban-Halvorsen joined others to create the winning short Love at First Bite while Isaiah worked as Education Assistant at 911 Media Arts last summer.
A jury of filmmakers and educators screened more than 120 entries to select 14 works for the festival. Only eight of these received the Creative Self-Expression Award. The festival seeks to celebrate originality, freshness, authenticity, and conviction in the voices of young filmmakers. According to the jurors, “We are left in awe and with the feeling that the world is going to be all right.” This is the eighth year in a row that students in the BHS Video Production Program have been winners at the event.
To see new work by BHS filmmakers, attend our end-of-the-semester Showing on Friday, February 8 or Friday, February 22 at 7 pm in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults or $8 for students. All proceeds support the BHS Video Production Program.
Wednesday, June 06, 2012
BALLARD VIDEO STUDENTS WIN AT REGIONAL EMMY AWARDS
The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences gives High School Awards of Excellence to recognize the best in student television production. The regional awards celebrate outstanding work from five Northwest states: Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Alaska. Entries are judged by the same professional organization that selects Emmy winners, and presented at the Northwest Regional Emmy Awards.
Seven students in the Ballard High School Video Production Program were winners at this year’s event. Ariahna Ghormley (’13), Louis Weissman (’12) & Mackenzie Wright (’13) won for Photography/Editing on their commercial for Crash Landing Pizza. Walker Evans (’13), Elise Neroutsos (’11), James Vitz-Wong (’11) & Same Weller (’13) won the Long Form (Fiction) category for their sinister short The Craft.
This makes the sixth year in a row that students in the Ballard High School Video Production Program have been winners at the event. Five other Ballard High School video productions had also been nominated: two in the Writing category, two in the Public Service Announcement category, and two in the Photography/Editing category (making every nomination in that category a work from the Ballard High School Video Production Program).
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
NORTHWEST HIGH SCHOOL FILM FESTIVAL HONORS BHS FILMMAKERS
Students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program won multiple awards and honors at the 14th annual Northwest High School Film Festival at the Cinerama Theater in downtown Seattle. This is the largest and longest running festival for high school filmmakers in the Puget Sound region. This year 354 productions were entered in the competition from 25 high schools. Ballard High School led the pack of winners with a total of 14 awards and honors.
The festival was judged by a panel of 23 industry professionals and college media professors. The event was organized by the Media Educators Excellence Team (MEET) and sponsored by Adobe, the Art Institute of Seattle, Shoreline Community College, Seattle University Film Studies, the Academy of Interactive Entertainment and Key Code Media. For more information on the NWHSFF, visit www.nwhsff.org.
BHS productions were honored in six different categories, reflecting the diverse skills and talents of Ballard’s film students. Some of the winning productions will be shown on Friday, June 1 at The Showing, a screening of work by students in the BHS Video Production Program. The event begins at 7 p.m. in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door.
Ballard’s Northwest High School Film Festival winners:
AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE
Comedic Narrative
The Number
Alex Guettler, Ana Krafchick, Helen Miller
Commercial
Crash Landing Pizza
Ariahna Ghormley, Louis Weissman, Mackenzie Wright
News Feature
Your Teen Health Center
Zachary Green, Isaiah Hoban Halversen, Kimi Rutledge
Public Service Announcement
Ballard Food Bank
Brittney Blokker, Jacob Scott, Sam Weller
Paper or Plastic
Oona Lowe, David Moore, Adlai Nissen
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Comedic Narrative
Chalk
Kenton King, Adlai Nissen, Silvano Ross
Thanks for Nothing
Cedar Crook, Alex James, Brianna Kadem
Dramatic Narrative
The Craft
Walker Evans, Elise Neroutsos, Sam Weller, James Vitz-Wong
Falling
Dayan Flynn-Walsh, Oona Lowe, Mackenzie Wright
Making a Mark
Brittney Blokker, Helen Miller, Sam Weller
Sunlight
Isaiah Hoban Halversen, Kenji Takada-Dill
Music Video
We Are the Children
John Christensen, Darienne Noelle-Clark, Alex Scheller, Jacob Scott
Public Service Announcement
Extend School Lunch
Nick Coons-Levy, Gabe Fabens, Quinlin North, Lorenzo Rossi
Trash Talks
Julian Amrine, Nick Hauger, Josh Vredevoogd

The festival was judged by a panel of 23 industry professionals and college media professors. The event was organized by the Media Educators Excellence Team (MEET) and sponsored by Adobe, the Art Institute of Seattle, Shoreline Community College, Seattle University Film Studies, the Academy of Interactive Entertainment and Key Code Media. For more information on the NWHSFF, visit www.nwhsff.org.
BHS productions were honored in six different categories, reflecting the diverse skills and talents of Ballard’s film students. Some of the winning productions will be shown on Friday, June 1 at The Showing, a screening of work by students in the BHS Video Production Program. The event begins at 7 p.m. in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door.
Ballard’s Northwest High School Film Festival winners:
AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE
Comedic Narrative
The Number
Alex Guettler, Ana Krafchick, Helen Miller
Commercial
Crash Landing Pizza
Ariahna Ghormley, Louis Weissman, Mackenzie Wright
News Feature
Your Teen Health Center
Zachary Green, Isaiah Hoban Halversen, Kimi Rutledge
Public Service Announcement
Ballard Food Bank
Brittney Blokker, Jacob Scott, Sam Weller
Paper or Plastic
Oona Lowe, David Moore, Adlai Nissen
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Comedic Narrative
Chalk
Kenton King, Adlai Nissen, Silvano Ross
Thanks for Nothing
Cedar Crook, Alex James, Brianna Kadem
Dramatic Narrative
The Craft
Walker Evans, Elise Neroutsos, Sam Weller, James Vitz-Wong
Falling
Dayan Flynn-Walsh, Oona Lowe, Mackenzie Wright
Making a Mark
Brittney Blokker, Helen Miller, Sam Weller
Sunlight
Isaiah Hoban Halversen, Kenji Takada-Dill
Music Video
We Are the Children
John Christensen, Darienne Noelle-Clark, Alex Scheller, Jacob Scott
Public Service Announcement
Extend School Lunch
Nick Coons-Levy, Gabe Fabens, Quinlin North, Lorenzo Rossi
Trash Talks
Julian Amrine, Nick Hauger, Josh Vredevoogd
Sunday, May 20, 2012
FUTURE FILMMAKERS LIGHT UP THE SCREEN
Everyone is invited to a screening of videos produced second semester by students in the Ballard High School Video Production Program. The Showing will be Friday, June 1 at 7 p.m. in the Ballard High School auditorium. Included will be short comedies, dramas, public service announcements, news features, and documentaries. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door. All proceeds will benefit students in the Video Production Program. Arrive early! The Showing routinely packs the auditorium and people have been turned away.
This screening will feature a variety of productions recently honored by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences as well as international film festivals such as the National Film Festival for Talented Youth and the Westport Youth Film Festival.
This screening will feature a variety of productions recently honored by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences as well as international film festivals such as the National Film Festival for Talented Youth and the Westport Youth Film Festival.
Wednesday, May 09, 2012
AND THE NOMINEES ARE...
The Northwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) has announced nominees for the Northwest High School Awards of Excellence. These awards celebrate the most outstanding productions from five Northwest states: Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska. Students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program earned seven nominations, the most of any school or program. The winners will be announced on June 2nd at the 49th Annual Regional Emmy Awards ceremony.
Ballard’s nominations span four categories, reflecting the diverse skills of the producers. In the technical category of Photography/Editor, Ballard High School students garnered every nomination. These are the nominations by category.
Photographer/Editor:
Crash Landing Pizza by Louis Weissman, Ariahna Ghormley & Mackenzie Wright
Safe at Last: The Story of Antwaan Dixon by Louis Weissman, Nate Sawtell & Dylan Spence
Senior Assassin by Alex Johnston, Tony Meyer & Elizabeth Turnell
Writing:
Safe at Last: The Story of Antwaan Dixon by Nate Sawtell, Dylan Spence & Louis Weissman
Long-Form, Fiction:
The Craft by Elise Neroutsos, Walker Evans, James Vitz-Wong & Sam Weller
Public Service Announcement:
Ballard Food Bank by Jacob Scott, Brittney Blokker & Sam Weller
Senior Assassin by Tony Meyer, Alex Johnston-Thomas & Elizabeth Turnell
The nominees were selected by industry professionals in the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. This makes the sixth year in a row that Ballard High School video producers have been nominated. Last year they received 9 nominations and won the category of Long Form Non-Fiction.
BHS video students will present new works completed this semester at The Showing on Friday, June 1 at 7 pm in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door.
Ballard’s nominations span four categories, reflecting the diverse skills of the producers. In the technical category of Photography/Editor, Ballard High School students garnered every nomination. These are the nominations by category.
Photographer/Editor:
Crash Landing Pizza by Louis Weissman, Ariahna Ghormley & Mackenzie Wright
Safe at Last: The Story of Antwaan Dixon by Louis Weissman, Nate Sawtell & Dylan Spence
Senior Assassin by Alex Johnston, Tony Meyer & Elizabeth Turnell
Writing:
Safe at Last: The Story of Antwaan Dixon by Nate Sawtell, Dylan Spence & Louis Weissman
Long-Form, Fiction:
The Craft by Elise Neroutsos, Walker Evans, James Vitz-Wong & Sam Weller
Public Service Announcement:
Ballard Food Bank by Jacob Scott, Brittney Blokker & Sam Weller
Senior Assassin by Tony Meyer, Alex Johnston-Thomas & Elizabeth Turnell
The nominees were selected by industry professionals in the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. This makes the sixth year in a row that Ballard High School video producers have been nominated. Last year they received 9 nominations and won the category of Long Form Non-Fiction.
BHS video students will present new works completed this semester at The Showing on Friday, June 1 at 7 pm in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students and will be sold at the door.
Thursday, May 03, 2012
BALLARD FILMMAKERS SCORE AT INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
Three productions by Ballard High School video students have been named Official Selections of the Westport Youth Film Festival. The honored films are The Craft by Walker Evans, Elise Neroutsos, James Vitz-Wong & Sam Weller; Dream House by Ariahna Ghormely, Ana Krafchick & Louis Weissman, and A Comfortable Home, a project produced over the summer by Isaiah Hoban Halverson. The festival will take place in Bridgeport, Connecticut, on June 2nd.
Westport is home to many New York film professionals, and the festival, in association with the Westport Arts Center, is designed to provide an outlet for young filmmakers to share their work in a professional environment and receive constructive criticism from a combination of peers and professionals. This competitive festival screens “the best international and national high school and middle school films.” For more about WYFF, visit www.westportyouthfilmfest.org.
Dream House will premiere with other works produced by students during the spring semester at The Showing on Friday, June 1st in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students.
Westport is home to many New York film professionals, and the festival, in association with the Westport Arts Center, is designed to provide an outlet for young filmmakers to share their work in a professional environment and receive constructive criticism from a combination of peers and professionals. This competitive festival screens “the best international and national high school and middle school films.” For more about WYFF, visit www.westportyouthfilmfest.org.
Dream House will premiere with other works produced by students during the spring semester at The Showing on Friday, June 1st in the BHS auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for students.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
NFFTY PREMIERES NEW FILM BY RIKKE HEINECKE
The National Film Festival for Talented Youth (NFFTY) celebrates great work by filmmakers 22 and younger. This allows promising high school filmmakers to meet college students from the nation’s leading film schools. For students from the Ballard High School Video Production Program, it also gives them a chance to catch up with program alumni and see their recent work.
Rikke Heinecke (BHS ’11) produced and directed titles are too mainstream last summer before leaving Seattle for the School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California. Networking with other graduates preparing to attend USC put her in touch with Dylan Visvikis (Woodenville High School, ’11). Heinecke was taken with his script for titles..., and launched a successful campaign on Kickstarter to raise funds for the project. Using a network she had developed during her studies in the BHS Video Program, Heinecke hired Bud Harrington as Director of Photography and worked with Screen Actors Guild veteran and acting coach Valerie Mamches to cast the production. She also recruited Sydney Jarol (BHS ’11) and Jacob Scott (BHS ’13) for the camera crew.
titles are too mainstream tells the story of Alex, who embarks on a quest to become a hipster legend and win over the girl of his dreams. "I'm very excited to be premiering the film at NFFTY” says Heinecke, “it will be the first time anyone (including the actors and crew members) will have seen it."
Heinecke is no stranger to NFFTY. In 2010, she was on a team of 5 filmmakers from Ballard High School to win NFFTYs 48 Hour Film Off. The following year, her first visual story, Signs, premiered at NFFTY on Opening Night. Heinecke is looking forward to NFFTY 2012. "I am so excited to get to be a part of NFFTY for my third year in a row. It’s a wonderful opportunity to meet amazingly talented filmmakers. Last year I met Allison Tate-Cortese, who is also a freshman in the Film and Television Production Program at USC and has become one of my best friends. I really can't wait to see who I'll meet this year and what inspiring stories will unfold in front of me on the big screen."
titles are too mainstream will screen during the Sex, Lies, & Angst program at the SIFF Uptown 2 Friday at 9 pm. As previously announced, NFFTY will also screen 6 short films produced by students currently in the BHS Video Production Program. For a complete festival schedule, visit www.nffty.org.
Rikke Heinecke (BHS ’11) produced and directed titles are too mainstream last summer before leaving Seattle for the School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California. Networking with other graduates preparing to attend USC put her in touch with Dylan Visvikis (Woodenville High School, ’11). Heinecke was taken with his script for titles..., and launched a successful campaign on Kickstarter to raise funds for the project. Using a network she had developed during her studies in the BHS Video Program, Heinecke hired Bud Harrington as Director of Photography and worked with Screen Actors Guild veteran and acting coach Valerie Mamches to cast the production. She also recruited Sydney Jarol (BHS ’11) and Jacob Scott (BHS ’13) for the camera crew.
titles are too mainstream tells the story of Alex, who embarks on a quest to become a hipster legend and win over the girl of his dreams. "I'm very excited to be premiering the film at NFFTY” says Heinecke, “it will be the first time anyone (including the actors and crew members) will have seen it."
Heinecke is no stranger to NFFTY. In 2010, she was on a team of 5 filmmakers from Ballard High School to win NFFTYs 48 Hour Film Off. The following year, her first visual story, Signs, premiered at NFFTY on Opening Night. Heinecke is looking forward to NFFTY 2012. "I am so excited to get to be a part of NFFTY for my third year in a row. It’s a wonderful opportunity to meet amazingly talented filmmakers. Last year I met Allison Tate-Cortese, who is also a freshman in the Film and Television Production Program at USC and has become one of my best friends. I really can't wait to see who I'll meet this year and what inspiring stories will unfold in front of me on the big screen."
titles are too mainstream will screen during the Sex, Lies, & Angst program at the SIFF Uptown 2 Friday at 9 pm. As previously announced, NFFTY will also screen 6 short films produced by students currently in the BHS Video Production Program. For a complete festival schedule, visit www.nffty.org.
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