Frontier Café | A SEEfest Podcast  By  cover art

Frontier Café | A SEEfest Podcast

By: Frontier Café | A SEEfest Podcast
  • Summary

  • The Frontier Café welcomes travelers, vagabonds, wanderers, adventurers, misfits, rebels, artists, raconteurs, troubadours, wordsmiths, dreamers, fandoms, students, and teachers alike. The conversations, drinks, and laughs connect these visitors as they share their experiences. Books, movies, history, personal pasts, and narratives in any form are welcome subjects at the tables in The Frontier Café. Go ahead -- grab a drink, open your minds, and vicariously travel Southeastern Europe and the American West. Explore and engage to your heart’s content! A production of SEEfest Los Angeles.
    Frontier Café | A SEEfest Podcast
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Episodes
  • Conversation with Sean McNulty
    Dec 20 2022

    In this episode of the Frontier Cafe, Vera Mijojlic has a conversation with Sean McNulty, author of the daily podcast and newsletter, The WakeUp, called ‘a cult favorite’ among the cognoscenti. The WakeUp is best described as an aggregator, a roundup of entertainment industry business news from trusted sources and relevant media outlets. The news is delivered as an attractive package, a perfect pairing for that first cup of coffee at daybreak. We are pleased to have an insider like Sean McNulty share his views of the entertainment industry, theatrical business, the media landscape, and what it takes to aggregate and deliver news everyone's eager to start the day with.

    About the Guest

    Sean McNulty is a writer and media maverick, EMMY-winning content producer, creator of short video segments on popular culture, podcast producer, host, and creator of marketing campaigns. He writes the widely read daily, The Wakeup, Hollywood and media biz morning news roundup aimed at entertainment industry executives. Part of THE ANKLER subscription product.

    THE WAKEUP

    Sean McNulty's website

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    49 mins
  • Conversation with Ines Tanović
    Nov 28 2022

    Note: This interview is in the Bosnian language (the link to the English translation is below).

    This episode of Frontier Cafe features a conversation with Ines Tanović, the manager of the production company DOKUMENT and the Sarajevo Film Center. The conversation, in Serbo-Croatian, went over her career as a filmmaker, the history of Yugoslav cinema, and her current efforts to promote local Balkan film cultures and auteurs. I hope you'll like our conversation about the history and future of Balkan cinema!

    Born in Sarajevo in 1965, Ines Tanović graduated from the Dramaturgy Department of the Sarajevo Academy of Performing Arts. She has been a member of the Association of Filmmakers of BiH since 1988. In 1991, with her father, Sejfudin Tanović, she founded a production called DOKUMENT in Sarajevo, which is now managed by her and Alem Babić, a producer. From 2014 to 2019, she was the president of the Association of Filmmakers of the FBiH and of the Association of Filmmakers of BiH. She currently holds the position of acting general manager of the Sarajevo Film Centre. From 1986 to 2002, she wrote scripts and directed 6 short fiction movies. She worked as an editor at national and federal public broadcasting stations. In 2004, she was awarded by the Hubert Bals Fund for the script for “Entanglement.” She attended the Berlinale Talent Campus in 2006, and her project “Decision” was selected among 160 entries from all over the world for Berlin Today Award 2011.

    In 2010, she directed the Bosnian part of the long feature omnibus “Some Other Stories” (coproduced by BiH, Serbia, North Macedonia, Slovenia, Croatia, and Ireland, supported by EURIMAGES). The film has been invited to more than 40 international festivals and earned six international awards. She is the author of a short film titled “Starting Over,” screened in the short film competition section of the 16th Sarajevo Film Festival in 2010. The film has been shown at many international festivals. Her film “Our Everyday Life” has been shown at more than 45 international film festivals and has earned 15 awards. The film was selected as a Bosnian and Herzegovinian entry for the 2015 Academy Awards.

    She is the author of documentaries titled “Exhibition” (shown at the SHORT CORNER of the 2009 Cannes festival), “Living Monument” (2012), “Coal Mine” (2012), “Ghetto 59” (2013), and “A Day on the Drina” (2011), which was rewarded with the Big Stamp Award for Best Film of the 2012 ZagrebDox International Documentary Film Festival. It was screened as a competing documentary at the 2012 Sarajevo Film Festival. Her second film, “Son” premiered in the Competition Program – Feature Film at the 25th Sarajevo Film Festival (2019). The script for this film was awarded as the best project of the 2015 CineLink, and the most promising European project, as voted by LA producers, at the 2016 SEEfest LA. It has been screened at numerous international festivals.

    Source.

    Click here to download the English translation of the interview.

    Connect with Ines on social:
    Instagram | Facebook | Twitter

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    43 mins
  • Conversation with George Csicsery
    Nov 8 2022

    In this episode of the Frontier Café, Michael Pardy hosts a discussion with SEEFest Jury alum, writer, and prolific filmmaker George Csicsery. Csicsery and his production company, Zala Films (zalafilms.com) are based in Oakland, California.

    An independent filmmaker since 1968, George has directed 35 films on various subjects, focusing much of his work in the last 30+ years on mathematicians who may be renowned and influential in their field, but whose work and lives are unknown to the general public. In 2009, he received the Joint Policy Board for Mathematics Communications Award for “bringing mathematics to nonmathematical audiences.”

    In this wide-ranging discussion, George talks about his journey from an undergrad majoring in comparative religion to his life’s work as a journalist and filmmaker and the inherent challenges and rewards in making and financing his films. He also discusses some of his latest projects, including the remarkably poignant Secrets of the Surface: The Mathematical Vision of Maryam Mirzakhani (2020) and his still-in-production, Journeys of Black Mathematicians.

    Please visit: http://www.zalafilms.com

    About the Host

    Michael Pardy was an actor in New York City for over twenty years. He had a second career at the Open Society Foundations (OSF), most notably working on the Arts & Humanities Initiative of the OSF Project on Death in America. Subsequently, he was the founding COO of the OSF spinoff, Institute on Medicine as a Profession at Columbia University. As well he is an avid collector of Outsider Art and Mexican Retablos. Post-covid, he looks forward to resuming his acting career.

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    35 mins

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