- Source: ReelAbilities
ReelAbilities is the United States' largest film festival dedicated to showcasing films by, or about, people with disabilities. It was founded by JCC Manhattan in New York City in 2007.
Overview
The Festival's Co-directors are Isaac Zablocki and Ravit Turjeman. ReelAbilities strives to make the festival as fully accessible as possible. In 2012, it screened films in 23 locations in all five of New York City's boroughs. All films screened by the Festival are captioned. It is also "the only festival in New York that prints film programs in Braille and features audio descriptions for the blind".
In March 2015, the NY edition of the festival opened on the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum and was featured for 7 days in 37 venues throughout the greater NY metropolitan area.
ReelAbilities is now a touring film festival throughout the United States. Cities on its itinerary include:
Atlanta
Bay Area
Boston
Columbus
Cincinnati
Chicago
Greater D.C.
Houston
Minneapolis/St. Paul
New Jersey
New York City
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Richmond, Virginia
Programming
Disabilities of any kind are explored in the films in the ReelAbilities Film Festival programming. In 2012, films featured included disabilities such as autism, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, blindness and mental health. ReelAbilities screens films from the United States as well as international films, including from countries such as Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Canada, China, Germany, and the United Kingdom.
According to Festival Director Isaac Zablocki, most of the films originate outside the United States: ...specifically in Europe, where there's traditionally a lot of smaller films and access to government funds. Lots of these films are amazing, and, best of all, we get to show premieres. Many of the films are embraced outside of the U.S., but we're often the first or only American festival to show these movies.
Jeff Remz, a communications and marketing manager of the Boston Jewish Film Festival, helped sponsor ReelAbilities in Boston in 2012. Remz says, "Disabilities don't know boundaries by way of country, ethnicity, religion, or community."
See also
Disability in the arts
Disability in the media
References
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- ReelAbilities
- Reel
- Reel to Reel
- The Reels
- Cable reel
- Reeling
- Reel It In
- Reel-to-reel audio tape recording
- Virginia Reel
- Danny Woodburn