Monday, November 29, 2010
A New School, Overlooking the Sea
If you haven't already heard the news, work on the new primary school in Sierra Leone has begun! Thanks to Schools for Salone and all of our incredible donors for making this a reality! Here's the email from Joseph, our local contact, with all of the details:
Dear Cindy & Others,
The Children In Crisis Primary School Building Project site was visited by me, Mamusu, Isatu Abu at Allen town over looking sea by Lungi area. A plot of land 75 feet by 100 feet a quiet place but terrecing of the land is needed in order to have the proposed building on two levels. On the 12th Nov. the ground breaking ceremony was carried out by whole school pupils, teachers parents, coomunity members and MCF staff members. After prayers by Christians and Muslims, the groung breaking were done by following:
Isha Kamara girl class 1 pupil
Daniel Sesay boy class 5 pupil
Isatu Sento Kamara Propraratress
Mamusu Tarawali Co.Prpratretress Head teacher
J.S Kanu MCF/SFS/Donor Representative
Lahai M. Tarawali Community "
The ceremony concluded with refreshments to all. The terrecing of the land started with 10 strong men on contract from the community and Lansana's team. The terrecing is expected to last for 2 to 3 weeks. You willposted on development.
Attached are pictures on the visit to the land and the ground breaking ceremony. With special thanks and appreciation to the Donors and Schools For Salone USA from the school and MCF.
With regards
J.Williams-Lamin & Others.
Monday, October 4, 2010
Thanks to Aspen FilmFest!
And here's some additional press from the festival:
Directors LaMattina and Walker follow sixth-graders from an elementary school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y., which as recently as 2005 was declared an “impact zone” due to the excessive violence in the community, who were paired with students in war-town Sierra Leone for a school year-long pen-pal program.
“Usually movies that have anything to do with Africa are all about shock value and people’s limbs getting cut off with machetes,” Walker said. “But for me, personally, when I see that type of stuff, I shut down because the problem is too big. So we made a conscious effort to not use footage like that, and just let the kids tell their story. Which, I think, is more powerful.”
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Brownstones in the Aspen Daily News
But it is perhaps in the quieter films, like “Brownstones to Red Dirt,” that the true character of Filmfest emerges. In the movie, sixth-graders from an elementary school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y., which as recently as 2005 was declared an “impact zone” due to the excessive violence in the community, were paired with students in war-town Sierra Leone for a pen-pal program.
Co-director Dave LaMattina had been working in an animation studio, and was looking for “a project with a little more meaning.”
“I had done a film in South Africa on kids with HIV and AIDS,” LaMattina says. “So I was looking for something along those lines. And what I really wanted to do was find a story where there was hope in a community where you wouldn’t expect it.”
The results were astounding. The kids in Bed-Stuy were able to gain perspective on their own lives through interactions with the orphaned children that struggled for food, water and electricity — though who still had similar goals and aspirations — in Sierra Leone. And the African children gained something that had been denied them for most of their lives: someone who cared.
Countdown to Aspen FilmFest!
In just five short days, Brownstones to Red Dirt will be one of just twenty films to screen at the 32nd annual Aspen FilmFest. All of the screening details are here. We are so excited to be a part of this truly independent festival that aims to focus on the "human spirit." As the festival's Artistic Director Laura Thielen recently told the Aspen Daily News, "We tend to look at ordinary people doing extraordinary things.”
That's exactly how we see the kids that star in Brownstones - Balla, Emmanuel, Augusta, Abdul, Fred, Destiny, Malik and Isaiah. They are ordinary kids doing extraordinary things, as they reach out and offer their hearts to strangers on the other side of the world.
Friday, August 13, 2010
Thank you RIFF!
Hey everyone! Happy summer! We just wanted to thank the Rhode Island Film Festival for screening Brownstones this week. The festival is the largest public film event in New England with more than 200 films this year. Check out all of the details here.
We are really honored to be a part of it – even though we aren’t able to be there! We're incredibly disappointed to miss the other films and festivities.
There are lots of exciting things coming up though, including a screening in Bed-Stuy this fall and the construction of the school is Sierra Leone. Many more details to come!
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Brownstones Honored at Seattle Film Fest
Restrepo, a film by Sebastian Junger (of A Perfect Storm fame), was fourth runner up and Waiting for Superman by Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth) was in the Top 10. We feel honored to be named among these remarkable documentaries.
The documentary awards are below and the complete list is here:
Best Documentary Golden Space Needle Award
(tie) “Ginny Ruffner: A Not So Still Life,” Karen Stanton and "Waste Land,” Lucy Walker
First runner up: “The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls,” Leanne Pooley
Second runner up: “Wheedle's Groove,” Jennifer Maas
Third runner up: “Brownstones to Red Dirt,” Dave LaMattina and Chad N. Walker
Fourth runner up: “Restrepo,” Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington
Top 10: “Marwencol” (Jeff Malmberg), “Waiting for ‘Superman’” (Davis Guggenheim), “Chihuly Fire & Light” (Peter West), “American: The Bill Hicks Story” (Matt Harlock and Paul Thomas), “Mugabe and the White African” (Lucy Bailey and Andrew Thompson)
Monday, June 14, 2010
Thanks Brooklyn!
The 13th annual Brooklyn International Film Fest closed last night with an excellent party at Dram in Williamsburg. Many thanks to the organizers for including Brownstones in all of the fun! If you missed our two screenings, stay tuned, we've got plans to show the film again in Brooklyn at summer's end.
Also, a big thanks to Nick Shimkin of the Kings County Cinema Society for his help in getting the word out about Brownstones. His group does weekly film screenings throughout Brooklyn and keeps tabs on fun, free events throughout the borough. Get on his mailing list here!
Monday, June 7, 2010
Malik to Brooklyn: You Can Google Me
*Diamond Saj (above center, red plaid shirt), the Salone rap artist who recorded the beautiful track at the end of the documentary, Children of the Universe.
*Malik, one of our Bed-Stuy pen pals (above, second from right). Malik joined us for the Q&A after the show and the audience asked him tons of questions, from his impressions of Sierra Leone to his plans for the future. He cheerily answered them all (in a much deeper voice – he's 13 now) and was sure to inform the crowd: "You can Google me!" Already a businessman. Ha!
*6th graders from the School for the Urban Environment, the Bed-Stuy school featured in Brownstones. The kids passed out postcards after the film to let people know we're raising money to build a new library there.
We also got to meet Ishmael Islam (above, far right) who screened his sweet short, Departure from a Love, after Brownstones. Ishmael took part in Reel Works Teen Filmmaking program and is now a student at Pratt.
Thanks to everyone for coming out in the heat! (And to Henry Street Ale House for letting us stay awhile). It was a great night!
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Buy Tix to the Saturday Brooklyn Screening
If you can't make the movie, come to the festival's after party at Henry Street Ale House. Hope to see you there.
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Pictures from the Seattle Film Fest
The Q&A following the first screening. We were joined by Cindy Nofziger of Schools for Salone and Dustin Kaspar, SIFF's Educational Programs Coordinator.
Cindy and Bob from the Seattle-based nonprofit Schools for Salone posing at SIFF's Centerpiece Gala on Saturday night. We've teamed with SFS to build a primary school in Freetown.
We (Really) Heart Seattle Film Fest
Monday, May 31, 2010
What Up Prince of Persia!
The Stranger is listing Brownstones as a "recommended" movie with a green star. They also had a nice review of the documentary earlier this week. We're planning to see Bilal's Stand (listed above) after our screening tonight.
What Seattletonians Are Saying
Already one of the bigger talkers among the many films being shown at SIFF this month, "Brownstones to Red Dirt" has raised $53,000 for Seattle-based Schools for Salone to build a new primary school. -- Humberto Martinez, Seattle PI, The Big Blog
This show had me laughing until I cried (wait until you meet Malik with his back up plans) and then I just plain cried. It was amazing to see an eleven year-old boy say that he feels like he's treated like dirt and then see children that sleep on dirt in the next scene. One of the most heart wrenching scenes involved the Sierra Leonians doing a reenactment of the war that tore their country apart and turned them into the orphans that they are. -- Arletta Gustafson, The Common Room
Children have a way of reminding us that interacting with other cultures will change our self-centric priorities. This film is a beautiful document of that. -- Dustin Kaspar, SIFF Programmer, 2010 Programmers' Picks
Sunday, May 30, 2010
We Heart Seattle Film Fest
Here are a few comments from people after the show:
I think that this movie was incredible and awe inspiring. It shows how the love we have is limitless and that we can overcome anything with the help of others. The connection that the students made was so beautiful and made me happy. - Anna
I heard about this movie from a friend that lives in Washington state. She said it was amazing and that she laughed so hard she cried. And then she just cried. - Michelle
This film is beautfully graceful. My family tree has roots in Sierra Leone, and I grew up in South Central Los Angeles in the 1970's. This film hit home. Hopeful, Heartbreaking, and in some parts humorous. - Kelly
Saturday, May 29, 2010
Our First Seattle Press Review
When Fred says that growing up as a black kid in the projects makes him feel like "dirt, a black piece of dirt," my heart broke a little. In this post-Obama age, that a black child in America should think that of himself should be unfathomable; that these kids view white people with distrust and fear unthinkable; yet poverty and racism continue to be lines that divide us in our own country. How can we ever hope to heal the world if we cannot even heal ourselves? The answer is: We can't.
And, by the way, we're on their homepage, wedged between Jake Gyllenhaal and Jessie Eisenberg!
Greetings From Seattle!
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Prepare Your Heartstrings ...
What is more adorable than sixth-grade pen pals? INTERNATIONAL sixth-grade pen pals, half of whom are orphans. Prepare your heartstrings for some major tugging: This documentary documents a group of sixth-graders in Bed-Stuy Brooklyn pen-palling with a group of parentless sixth-graders in war-ravaged Sierra Leone. They wonder: Is it true that in New York the whole house has light anytime, night or day? Do they skateboard in Sierra Leone? The children learn things about each other's lives and—yes—their own. Watching them read each other's letters is fantastic.
There are several other SIFF reviews here.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Countdown to Seattle, 6 Days and Counting!
Here are the Brownstones showtimes for anyone in the area. Or pass along to your friends and family! Tickets can be purchased here.
Saturday, May 29, 6:30 pm SIFF Cinema
Monday, May 31, 3:45pm Pacific Place Cinemas #10
We'll be at both screenings for Q&A's, along with the creator and director of Seattle-based Schools for Salone, Cindy Nofziger. We've partnered with this wonderful and dedicated nonprofit to build a school in Freetown for the children in the film.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Brownstones Comes Home: Brooklyn Showtimes
Saturday, June 5, 5pm at Brooklyn Heights Cinema
Wednesday, June 9, 5pm at Brooklyn Heights Cinema
You can buy tickets here. We hope you can make it out!
Monday, May 10, 2010
Brownstones Will Screen in Brooklyn!
Sunday, May 2, 2010
In the News: The Bed-Stuy Library
Is it too much to want a school library? For students at four Bedford-Stuyvesant public schools that share a building, it apparently is.
"Our kids want to read, but we don't have books," said Elizabeth Glenney, a sixth-grade English teacher at Urban School for the Environment, one of the schools in the building on Tompkins Ave. "I feel like we're failing them."
The school has started a library fund with $10,000 donated by the makers of a documentary film called "Brownstones to Red Dirt," which focuses on a pen pal program between Environment School sixth-graders and a group of orphans from Sierra Leone.
The schools need about $150,000 to get a full-fledged library running.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Kids Say the Sharpest Things
Pretty early on, a middle school kid stood up and said, "In the film, there is a mural that says 'Change your thoughts and you change your world' – has this experience changed your thoughts and your world?" We were sort of blown away by the question. It forced us to try to verbalize the how the film has affected us, which is no small task. Chad answered that, coming from a small town in Vermont where his graduating class only had 25 students, he had some serious preconceived notions about what life would be like in both places. Then, after meeting the kids and their families and seeing their sense of hope, especially in Sierra Leone, and the genuine kindness of the people he met in Bed-Stuy, he was embarrassed by what he thought they might be like. He went on to talk about how the experience has opened his eyes to the world and how he is careful not to form any preconceived notions in any aspect of his life.
Yesterday, we sat in a circle of 7-8th grade students at the Creative Arts Charter School in San Francisco and faced an equally impressive question. The kids were really curious as to where we stayed while we were in Sierra Leone. When we explained that we crashed in a fancy tourist hotel where we were on the beach, had access to showers, wi-fi and pizza, a kid raised his hand and asked how we could put ourselves up in a place with all the luxuries and comforts of home while the kids in the orphanage lived on dirt floors.
Honestly, that's a question we have often asked ourselves. How can we justify spending money to make a film rather than just giving it directly to people in need? The answer, we think, is doing everything we can to get the kids' stories out to the world. Thankfully, as we continue to work the festival circuit and meet with students like the ones we've seen in San Francisco, the voices of the kids in Sierra Leone and Brooklyn grow louder. And with each class that watches and discusses the film, awareness grows. We hope the film takes on a life of its own and inspires more action from kids throughout the world... and if it does, we'll know we've done our job.
Monday, April 26, 2010
A Busy Day at the SF Film Festival
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Greetings From San Francisco!
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
The Determination of Balla
I want to be like most big people. I want to have an office so people can call me so I can draw for them.
If my friend ever needs anything, if they ask me I will give it to them. That’s what makes a good friend. If my pen pal is good, I feel happy.
I ask myself, what can I remember about the rebels? What do I remember about what they did? When I remember it angers me. What they took from me, oh God.
From the bottom of my heart, I want to get big so I can avenge what they [the rebels] have done to me. What they’ve done to me, to my parents, and to my people ... But my parents would want me to be a good Sierra Leonean. I want to be a good Sierra Leonean. That is my wish.
Drawing will make things better for me, so I will not slack off, I will hold on tight.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Malik's Hope
I have like three back-up plans to my first job. I want to be a game designer, if I can’t do that, I’ll be a writer, and if I can’t do that, I’ll be an artist, and if I can’t do that I’ll be a photographer. Backup plans...
I think bullies are unsure of themselves. Heck, why would they be bothering people. Someone is bothering them. Those kids don’t think they’re special enough. They are special. We’re all special.
[Referring to his pen pal, Balla] I like that we both draw, I think that’s really something special. He likes drawing, I like drawing. I really think we could be a perfect match.
These kids kinda like deserve a second chance. I mean if I could just turn back the clock, I could just stop this war.
People. Friends. Other countries. Tokyo. Sure I’m black. Sure you’re black. Sure you’re white. Sure you’re Spanish. Sure you’re Hindi. Doesn’t matter. We’re still people.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Our Final Hours in Sarasota
A huge thanks again to everyone at SFF for taking such good care of us. We're sad to be home.
Day Two at Sarasota
We also visited with students in the film program at Sarasota's Booker High School. Having already watched Brownstones, they had lots of great questions for us. And Chad, waxing academic, dropped an Orson Welles quote on them. Oh boy.
A typewriter needs only paper; a camera uses film, requires subsidiary equipment by the truck-load and several hundreds of technicians. That is always the central fact about the film-maker as opposed to any other artist: he can never afford to own his own tools.
We had our second, and final, screening at 7:15. There was a nice turnout and the crowd was very responsive. Not surprisingly, Malik had them in stitches. And after the Q&A, many people came up to us and confessed that they had tears in their eyes when the Sierra Leone kids performed the play reenacting how the rebels had killed their parents. We left feeling pretty grateful.
We also got to see an incredibly moving documentary about a man's quest to run 63 marathons over 63 days to support kids suffering from a terminal disease known as ataxia telangiectasia. Check out Feat, created by the talented couple, Deb and Brad Carr.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Audio Interview on The Insider
You’ve heard me RAVE about this staggeringly great and important movie, now you can listen to the co-directors and associate producer chat about it live from our filmmakers lounge at Urban Reef!
Day One at Sarasota, A Roundup
Sarasota Herald Tribune
There are so many things to recommend about youthFEST selection “Brownstones to Red Dirt,” it’s hard to know where to begin. So let’s concentrate on the one thing kids never do anymore: Write letters. Because this 85-minute documentary is about the power of the printed word.
A second review, Herald Tribune
Among the unintended consequences of this inaugural feature-length movie — “Brownstones to Red Dirt” — was learning how little it takes to build a school in west Africa.
NY Daily News
Brooklyn and Freetown, Sierra Leone, are 4,310 miles apart - but at one Bedford-Stuyvesant school they'll forever be connected.
Buzz Worthy
This wonderful film is both educational and enchanting as it goes back and forth between the joys and the struggles these students have in both countries.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Greetings From Sunny Sarasota!
Brownstones in the Daily News!
Brooklyn and Freetown, Sierra Leone, are 4,310 miles apart - but at one Bedford-Stuyvesant school they'll forever be connected.
That's because a pair of filmmakers captured the unlikely pen-pal friendship between a handful of sixth-graders from the Urban School for the Environment on Tompkins Ave. and a group of orphans from war-torn Sierra Leone in a new documentary called "Brownstones to Red Dirt."
Read more.
Monday, April 12, 2010
Fred's Honesty
Now meet his pen pal Fred, an ambitious and laid back kid from Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn. When we first met Fred, we thought he was shy. He seemed so serious and quiet but once he started talking, we couldn’t stop listening. He tells it like it is.
[In Bed-Stuy] Some people fight about…money, girls, and stuff like that. Stupid things. But we don’t get involved in nothing like that.
[People] probably think, you black so you a bad little kid. Like really disrespectful cause you just black…fights all the time, curse, but it’s not true. It makes me feel like I ain’t nothing. A black piece of dirt.
I didn’t know, like, it would be that violent over there [in Sierra Leone].
That’s crazy how they don’t got the things that we got. Like medicine…to help them not to be sick and die at a young age.
He [Emmanuel] wants to be a DJ when he grows up and I like music too. First he’ll have to get a skateboard, and then I’ll teach him how to ollie.
Friday, April 9, 2010
Brownstones on The Insider Blog
INSIDER: Are these kids—from both locales—still a part of your lives?
DL: Obviously, we’ve been able to see the kids in Bed-Stuy more often–we’ve yet to go back to Salone–but they are a major part of our lives. We’ve exchanged a few letters and constantly get updates from the headmistress in Sierra Leone. We’ve also undertaken a considerable fundraising effort to benefit both groups. We’ve currently raised over $53,000 to build a school in Sierra Leone and create a school library in Bed-Stuy. I think it’s safe to say we think of them non-stop. I know Chad does–ask about his tattoo!
CW: Indeed. Before we left Sierra Leone we were all given Krio names and I had mine tattooed on my wrist. The name they gave me is Pa Sorie – which means “the one who delivers messages.” It is a reminder of not only our time in Sierra Leone, but also how much that time changed me as a person. Whenever I am having a bad day I look at that tattoo and it reminds of the kids in SaLone and how they have so much faith and hope even after the tragedies in their lives and when I think of life in those terms, my day never looks bad.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
The Wisdom of Emmanuel
Here are some thoughts from Emmanuel, who was rescued by Aunty Musu of the Children in Crisis school after the rebels murdered his parents. He was 14 years old when we filmed the documentary.
“When you are educated, no one can come and remove the education from your head.”
“I have to do something which is good for the people in Sierra Leone. That is the only way I think that Sierra Leone is going to be a good place in the future. For us and the children we are going to have in the future.”
“This war is not affecting the big people. It cannot affect them more than us, we the children, because they killed our mothers, they killed our fathers. We do not have parents again. So we think that this war is affecting us more than the big ones.”
“I have forgiven everybody who knows that he is guilty for my parent’s death because you have to forgive and forget.”
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Progress on the New School
Schools for Salone director Cindy Nofziger recently met with leaders from CIC to get the ball rolling. Our on-the-ground project manager, Joseph Lamin of the Masanga Children's Fund, is working with CIC to find the best site for construction.
We’ll keep you posted as plans progress! In the meantime, check out this e-mail we received from Aunty Musu, the director of CIC. “Ma Musu” is more than a teacher to her students – she rescued many of them after the civil war, and has been a mother to them all.
I thank you people very much for all what you have done for our children…We thank u for the things you gave to us, like notebooks for the children, football, their calendar, books for the children to read I thank you all….I am happy as far as my children have got their school building that will make them and even the community people we will be very happy. I we try to send u pictures of the children working at their school site.
much love Mamusu.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Countdown to Sarasota
Imagine you’re a kid from the projects in Brooklyn. Do you think you would have much in common with an orphan your age from the civil war-ravaged Sierra Leone?
What if it turned out that you did? And the bond you share is that no one gives either of you a chance. Then you learn that even if you can’t count on the outside world, you can count on each other!
That’s the premise of a wonderfully engaging documentary about a pen pal program between a group of youths in Bed-Stey and Sierra Leone...read more.Brownstones in Rhode Island
The Roving Eye screening is Saturday, April 24 at 6:30pm. The Rhode Island IFF runs August 10-15. More on that festival soon.
Also, if you know anyone who lives or works in the area that can help us spread the word about the film, please let us know!
Friday, April 2, 2010
Postcard Art Auction: A Roundup
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Welcome to the Brownstones Blog!
*the status of the school we’re building in Freetown, Sierra Leone
*updates on the library we’re creating at a Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn school
*news from upcoming film festivals
*details on where and when you can see the movie
In the meantime, you can always contact us at info[at]copperpotpictures[dot]com.