Sign up for Festival Updates
Buy DFFLA
Swag & Goodies!


T-Shirts, Totes, Hats & More!


HOW DO YOU
DOWNTOWN?
The Arts District, 7+FIG, Chinatown, Bunker Hill, Olvera Street, the Fashion District, South Park...

Downtown Film Festival — L.A. is as multi-faceted as its namesake location. Plugging into the downtown vibe is easy. Just choose your muse below & let it be your guide:

Fiercely Independent
For fans of independent cinema, the choices are nearly unlimited with dozens of feature film & short film programs, screening on a daily basis at the AT&T Center venue's newly renovated 500-seat state-of-the-art theater.
Music Fan-atic
Find your musical niche at the festival's exclusive Music Film Series at The GRAMMY Museum at L.A. Live!
Classic
Hollywood icon Paul Newman will be honored on the 1st anniversary of his passing with back-to-back, outdoor screenings of two of his most celebrated films: Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid & Hud. It's all FREE!
Scene-ster
Yeah, baby! We hear you. It's a party every night - uh, make that two parties every night — at the 2009 Downtown Film Festival.
Green-ster
Green is more than good for the environment. It's also cool. Join the "living green, living great" crowd all-day & into-the-evening at Sustainable L.A. on Thursday, Aug. 20th at the festival's 7+FIG.
DayTripper
The Shorts & Sweets, August 17-21, is especially designed for commuters. Get a taste of the festival twice daily with a fascinating smorgasbord of short films & videos from around the world. Complimentary coffee & sweets! Mmmmm.
Avant-Garde / Artsy
Digital Art L.A. is a festival within a festival, an international showcase of digital and art videos.

















Festival News


For Immediate Release

(11) Days of Summer

2009 Downtown Film Festival—L.A Wraps With
West Coast Premiere of 'Jackson 5 In Africa'


11-Day Event Showcases 200+ Films Including West Coast
Premiere of Spike Lee's 'Passing Strange'; Seymour Cassel
Honored With Lifetime Achievement Award


'Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle' and 'Storm Tiger Mountain'
Take Top Honors in Closing Night Awards Ceremonies

August 24, 2009 (LOS ANGELES) — The surprise independent film hit of the season, "(500) Days of Summer," is set in downtown Los Angeles with its two main characters exploring the architectural gems of the city's historic core. Also set in downtown Los Angeles, the 2009 Downtown Film Festival—Los Angeles offered 11 days (August 12-22) of adventurous programming spread throughout the area's architecturally significant and culturally diverse neighborhoods.

"There's no doubt that downtown Los Angeles has come into its own as a vibrant residential community, a world-class arts & entertainment district and the creative nexus for the city. Hollywood is recognizing this with films like '(500) Days of Summer' and the film that our opened our festival last year, 'In Search of a Midnight Kiss,' in which downtown L.A. is seen in all of its architectural glory," said festival director Greg Ptacek. "I think the 2009 Downtown Film Fest provided the real-life equivalent to these films to our thousands of attendees — a means for exploring the nooks and crannies of downtown L.A. through the special creative energy that only a film festival can deliver to a city."

The festival concluded on Saturday with the West Coast Premiere of "Jackson 5 In Africa," a 1974 music documentary film featuring rare footage of Michael Jackson at 16 years old, along with his brothers during their first-ever visit to Africa. The screening was followed by the Closing Night Awards Ceremony during which director-writer David Russo's absurdist comedy, "The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle," took home the Best Feature prize while Scott Cummings' "Storm Tiger Mountain" captured Best Short Film. The complete list of winners follows.

Over the 11-day festival, more than 200 films were screened — feature and short, narrative and documentary, foreign and domestic, and Hollywood and independent. Highlights of the 2009 festival included:

  • The West Coast premiere and Opening Night Film presentation of Spike Lee's "Passing Strange The Movie," based on the Tony –awarding-winning, autobiographical musical about downtown L.A. musician Stew.

  • The Los Angeles premiere and Centerpiece Film presentation of "Reach For Me," starring Seymour Cassel and Alfre Woodard and directed by LeVar Burton. Prior to the screening, Cassel was presented with The Hollywood Reporter's Lifetime Achievement Award.

  • The first-ever music documentary film festival at The GRAMMY Museum at L.A. Live, with appearances by such diverse musical artists at Bill Withers, Poncho Sanchez, Jerry Casale of Devo, and members of Brooklyn Zu and Wu Tang Clan.

  • A Paul Newman tribute featuring free-to-the-public outdoor screenings of two of the Hollywood icon's most celebrated films, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and "Hud."

  • An African diaspora film series with a special guest appearance by director Euzhan Palcy in conjunction with the presentation of her feature documentary "Aime Cesaire: A Voice For History."

  • The American-Latino Film Series, featuring the Los Angeles premiere of "Vicious Circle," a feature film set in Los Angeles Latino punk/skateboard scene and starring Paul Rodriguez, Jr.

  • Sustainable L.A., the festival's all-day signature "green" program that featured free-to-the-public guest lectures on urban ecology and screenings of environmental documentary short films from Current TV and Live Earth.

  • A film and seminar presentation about the increasing use of 3-D technology by independent filmmakers.

  • Digital Arts L.A and City of Angles, two series that explored avant-garde video and film, including L.A.'s internationally recognized "micro-cinema" movement.

The 2009 Downtown Film Festival—Los Angeles was presented by arts>Brookfield Properties, AT&T Center — Downtown Los Angeles, Geragos & Kabateck Enterprises, The GRAMMY Museum and Nuvay Web Services. The official restaurant of the 2009 festival was Rivera. The official hotel of the festival was Sheraton Los Angeles Downtown. JK|YM – PR For The Arts was the festival's official public relations counsel.

Festival sponsors included Computer Rental Equipment, Union Bank, Chivas Regal, Karl Strauss Beer, Northstar Moving, Famima, California Pizza Kitchen, Coca Cola, The Rowan, Fox Entertainment Group, Nuno Media Art Company, Indie Printing and Social Vibe.

For all press inquiries and for information about sponsorship of the 2010 Downtown Film Festival—Los Angeles, contact info@dffla.com.

The winners of the 2009 Downtown Film Festival—L.A. are:

BEST FEATURE:
The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle - Directed by David Russo, Produced by Peggy Case

BEST FEATURE DIRECTOR:
Jeffrey J. Orgill - Boppin' at the Glue Factory

BEST FEATURE SCREENPLAY:
Mickey Blaine - Commit.

BEST FEATURE EDITING:
Gabriel Sunday/Jordan J. Miller - My Suicide

BEST FEATURE CINEMATOGRAPHY:
Chris Soos - Phantom Love

BEST SHORT FILM:
Storm Tiger Mountain - Directed by Scott Cummings

THE PROGRAMMING DIRECTOR AWARD:
The Snake Mountain Colada - Directed by Calvin Lee Reeder

BEST DOWNTOWN FILM:
Journey to the Line - Corey Brandenstein

BEST SHORT FILM DIRECTOR:
Karen Glienke - Wild Like Ego

BEST SHORT FILM COMEDY:
Lalo - Directed by Daniel Maldonado

BEST SHORT FILM EXPERIMENTAL:
Chi Sei? - Directed by Michael Frost

BEST SHORT FILM DOCUMENTARY:
Point of Entry - Directed by Zeus Quijano, Jr.

BEST SHORT FILM ANIMATION:
Stranger's Poem - Directed by Geer DuBois

BEST SHORT FILM ENVIRONMENTAL:
Sea of Change - Directed by Jamie Taucher

BEST SHORT FILM FOREIGN:
Un Cafe Pour L'Amerique - Directed by Jossy Mayor

BEST SHORT FILM LATINO-AMERICAN:
Lucia No Besa a Nadie - Directed by Emanuel Gironi

BEST SHORT FILM MUSIC VIDEO:
Tina Guo's Queen Bee - Directed by Rich Ragsdale

BEST SHORT FILM SCREENPLAY:
Rick Curnutt and Bubba Murray - Free Lunch;

BEST SHORT FILM CINEMATOGRAPHY:
J.T. Gurzi - Insult to Injury

#####


More Festival News























  Home  Schedule   Tickets   Films   Events   News   Venues   About   Contact   Sponsors  Volunteers Acknowledgments Guidebook
© 2009 Downtown Film Festival — Los Angeles
Site by Nuvay Web Services