Sunday, August 28; 11am – 3pm
Exhibit Mall opens at 10am
UCLA campus, Young Hall Courtyard
Admission is FREE. Parking on campus in Lot 2 is $11.


Five great reasons to attend the Writers Faire:
1. Hear lively discussions about the art and craft of writing by more than 60 Writers’ Program instructors in your choice of 24 unique mini-classes
2. Enroll in most fall Writers’ Program courses at a 10% discount (This day only; advanced courses not included. You must enroll at the Faire in order to get the discount.)
3. Get one-on-one advisement on courses and certificate programs
4. Attend a special session on graduate programs in creative writing
5. Visit with 20 professional and community organizations, graduate programs, and writing-allied businesses who share a common goal of promoting writing in Los Angeles
Actor/Writer/Director Explores Relationships in Multi-Character Story

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“…its story is made crisp and new by some very intimate performances.”- Movieline
“Newlyweds is vintage Burns: charming, talky and funny.” - Forbes

New York, NY – August 4, 2011 – Tribeca Film announced today that it has acquired US and Canadian distribution rights to Newlyweds, actor/writer/director Edward Burns’ comedic relationship drama that had its world premiere as the Closing Night selection at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival. A release in late 2011 is planned across multiple platforms.

Dennis Farina Anchors Powerful Character Portrait Made in Association with Chicago’s Steppenwolf Films, founded by the creators of the Theatre Company

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“Farina recalls Burt Lancaster in Atlantic City … there is an emotional payoff that feels solid and right.
- Variety

New York, NY – July 28, 2011 – Tribeca Film announced today that it has acquired all distribution rights in the US and Canada to The Last Rites of Joe May, an emotionally powerful drama centering on a hustler (Dennis Farina, Get Shorty, Midnight Run, Snatch) traveling a winding road to redemption.  Joe Maywritten and directed by Joe Maggio and produced by Stephanie Striegel and Bill Straus in association with Chicago’s Steppenwolf Films, had its world premiere in competition at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival. The title will be released in October on VOD and theatrically by Tribeca Film, which is supported by Founding Partner American Express, and brings films to consumers across a range of platforms, including nationwide VOD, theatrical, DVD, pay-TV and digital. The deal was negotiated by Nick Savva, Director of Acquisitions for Tribeca Film with Nate Bolotin of XYZ Films on behalf of the producers.
AFS & THE ALAMO DRAFTHOUSE CINEMA CELEBRATE THE
20th ANNIVERSARY OF
‘SLACKER’ WITH RICHARD LINKLATER
For Immediate Release
June 9, 2011

Contact: Agnes Varnum, Director of Marketing, Austin Film Society or Brandy Fons, Fons PR for The Alamo Drafthouse
               agnes@austinfilm.org or 512-322-0145 x3213                       brandy@fonspr.com or 310-809-8882
(Austin, TX)—The Austin Film Society and The Alamo Drafthouse Cinema will present a Rolling Roadshow screening of SLACKER with writer/director Richard Linklater in attendance on Wednesday, June 22 at Austin Studios (1901 E 51st Street). Doors open at 8 PM, screening at 9 PM. Guests should bring camp chairs or blankets. Proceeds benefit the Texas Filmmakers’ Production Fund.

About SLACKER
SLACKER is a loving extended-family photo album, an insider’s ethnographic study of (mainly) 20-somethings trying to make sense of their world at the dawn of the 1990s. With an intriguing style inspired by Ophuls and Bresson, Richard Linklater’s break-out film follows an array of characters talking about ideas from books, movies, TV shows, music, and occasionally from direct observation and analysis. There is no “disorder” or “deficit” in this A.D.D-structured film. Instead, just like flipping through multiple channels on cable TV, we move from one person to another, walking around Austin, picking up bits and pieces of views, thoughts, fears, delusional certainties, and paranoid fantasies from dozens of post-punk, post-college young adults who are avoiding 9-5 jobs, families, commitments, and growing up. SLACKER may very well encapsulate the last time that many young people had the time and desire to contemplate the meaning of life and enjoy a pressure-free existence. Read more on the film by Chale Nafus, Director of Programming and Co-Founder of AFS >>
High resolution publicity stills available by replying to this message.