Showing posts with label film festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film festival. Show all posts
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
11th Annual NYC Mental Health Film Festival
11th Annual NYC Mental Health Film Festival
By Carla Rabinowitz, Advocacy Coordinator, Community Access
Bigger and Better Than Ever
Eleven years ago the NYC Mental Health Film Festival got started in a bizarre way. We were looking for a little fundraiser for a state-wide mental health advocacy organization, NYAPRS. A group of five of us were planning for a Halloween party in someone’s house in Queens, but her house had problems so we had to change plans.
Carlton Whitmore, now Director of Consumer Affairs at the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, brought in a copy of a film festival just starting in London. He asked: “What about a mental health film festival?” I said, “Sure. I will organize it.” I had no idea what I was getting myself into. I spent days on the Internet looking for positive mental health films, roaming through the then-plentiful video stores. It was very grassroots.
Then we got a little website and a few more films, and a lot more people.
Eleven years later we took over a large theater, Village East Cinema, premiered a major motion picture, “No Letting Go,” but still kept to our grassroots nature.
All selections in the NYC Mental Health Film Festival, now paid for by Community Access, are selected by mental health recipients. Our committee of recipients views every film together. The committee of recipients selects the majority of the films.
This year we showed “Patients’ Rites,” by Issa Ibrahim. I was slightly concerned when the committee picked this film, because Issa actually killed his mom 25 years ago in a psychotic state, and the focus of our film festival is to defeat stigma. But the committee insisted we show this film of hope and survival and achievement.
“Patients’ Rites” is a collection of music videos that explore the relations of mental health recipients and violence, men and women’s relations, and relations between mental health recipients and doctors.
We were fortunate this year to also show “How To Touch A Hot Stove.” This film explores stigma from the point of view of doctors and mental health recipients. And at the last minute, John Turturro, who narrates the film, decided to join us at one of our three question and answer periods after the films. Mr. Turturro is a well-known Hollywood actor from films like “Mr. Deeds,” “Raging Bull,” various Spike Lee movies and other films.
We showed some short films including “Blind Stigma,” about the stigma surrounding mental health in communities of color.
We ended with David Granirer’s “Cracking Up.” David is a well-known comedian in Canada who fell into a severe depression many years ago. Now he teaches other mental health recipients how to perform stand-up comedy. His film, “Cracking Up,” follows the first group of mental health recipients he trained. The documentary is not a stand-up comedy film. Rather, the film depicts the lives of those in his comedy group, what it took for them to appear on stage, the ups and downs in their lives, including issues surrounding male and female relations, homelessness, suicide, and, of course, the debate over medication.
To think 11 years ago we would have reached this level of professionalism, as my film-maker cousin commented, is beyond a dream.
We have changed from an older, simple website, to a professional website. We get submissions from all over the globe, while still keeping to the grassroots mental health recipient-run nature of this event.
To submit films go to: www.mentalhealthfilmfest.nyc. To help support this event go to: www.communityaccess/donate
I am so happy we kept this event going, to create community through film where mental health recipients and film-lovers can spend a day together debunking myths and learning together while laughing and crying at great films.
Note: Carla Rabinowitz is the Advocacy Coordinator at Community Access, a 41 year old non-profit that empowers mental health recipients by providing quality housing, employment training and other recovery services.
Pullout: “I was slightly concerned...because Issa actually killed his mom 25 years ago in a psychotic state, and the focus of our film festival is to defeat stigma. But the committee insisted we show this film of hope and survival and achievement.”
Friday, June 20, 2014
Film Festival Fights Stigma by Dan Frey
Film Festival Fights Stigma
By Dan Frey
The 10th Annual Mental
Health Film Festival ran its course this past weekend, May 17 and 18,
tackling stigma with positive depictions of the mental health
community. Co-sponsored by Community Access and the New York
Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services (NYAPRS), the
festival's theme this year was hospitalization and its alternatives.
In the wake of New York State's plans to reduce psychiatric hospital
beds and better fund community-based alternatives, it's a subject
with wide implications for our society as a whole.
Said festival organizer Carla
Rabinowitz of Community Access, “Hospital stays are not a panacea.
They often traumatize mental health recipients and are exorbitantly
expensive. Proven alternatives including supportive housing, therapy,
crisis respite care and the support of family and friends are all
more effective responses to psychiatric symptoms.”
This one-of-a-kind event featured
films, filmmaker panels and live audience discussions. Among the
films presented were:
Kings Park: Thirty years after
her commitment to the violent ward of Kings Park State Hospital,
filmmaker Lucy Winer returns to the now-abandoned institution that
once held her captive;
Technically Crazy:
A comedy about the power of friendship between a teen struggling with
his mental health condition and a grieving former police officer;
Coming Off Psych Drugs:
A group of mental health leaders discuss how they have successfully
tapered off of psychiatric medications through peer support and
focusing on their mental health in a holistic manner;
A Sister's Call:
One woman struggles to balance her marital family unit with efforts
to keep her adult brother at home with her despite his disabilities.
For
more information on future Film Festivals, please contact Carla
Rabinowitz at crabinowitz@communityaccess.org
Monday, April 1, 2013
Mental Health Film Festival May 5 2013
11:30 am to 5:00 pm
St Francis College, 182 Remsen,
Brooklyn, NY
This film festival defeats stigma by
bringing together mental health recipients and film buffs from around
the New York City region. This year we will showcase films that
introduce us to mental health recipients who have excelled in their
lives and careers. We will include a film on young adults who have
turned their lives around. We will also show a film narrated by Ted
“The Golden Voice” Williams. Community Access is in negotiations
to have Ted attend the film fest in person.
Tickets for entire day are $7 dollars
in advance; $10 at the door and that includes lunch.
Call Carla at 212-780-1400 x7726 or
email crabinowitz@communityaccess.org
or
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