#WatchAMovieOnUs Redux

eight films over eight weekends

Let’s face it! If you’re a cinema-lover, you’ve probably gone into a decline with the closure of all the cinemas! And with no end in sight, we’re here to make sure you get your weekly movie fix by streaming the best Caribbean films free of charge on ttfilmfestival.com!

Back by popular demand, ttff is delighted to present the #WatchAMovieOnUs online streaming series in partnership with NGC (The National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago).

As part of our fifteenth anniversary celebrations, from 24 May – 12 July 2020, ttff will stream eight trinidad+tobago film festival favourites – one per week on weekends – for free via the ttff website. Films will be available for 48 hours each (midnight Fridays to midnight Sundays).

Our streaming schedule will be posted to the ttff Facebook page over the next few days, so subscribe to our Facebook page facebook/ttfilmfestival .

trinidad+tobago film festival and FILMCO present: Quiz Night!

Are you a boss at trivia? Do you have what it takes to be the next game show champion? Here’s your chance to prove it!

Join us for an evening of raucous fun and some juicy competition! Let’s see which team will reign supreme as Quiz Night champions! Get your posse, bring the vibes and meet us online!

You can play from the comfort of your own sofa because our Quiz Night will be hosted via Zoom. Registration is as simple as RSVPing to our facebook event today! All you have to do is sign up and show up!

WHEN: 14 May 2020, 5:00pm-6:30pm
WHERE: Online video conferencing platform, ZOOM.

In Memoriam: Tony

by Bruce Paddington, Founder of Banyan Productions

Tony was a renaissance man, excelling as an actor, presenter, director, scriptwriter, playwright, teacher, dramaturge and mentor who played a critical role in the development of the Trinidad production company, Banyan, and its position in local television. I first interacted with Tony in 1976 when he played a lead part in Derek Walcott’s musical “O Babylon!” Tony’s stature was such that he was already being recognised as heir apparent to Walcott , but he also had a career in community theatre beckoning in Canada. Enter Banyan, which had just been awarded a major grant by the International Planned Parenthood Federation to produce a thirteen-part “education” television series “Who The CAP Fits”. Thus began an over forty-year relationship that only concluded with his recent sad death. 

Tony’s community theatre approach encouraged audience involvement and improvisation; when married with social commentary and the humour and satire of early Banyan programmes, a new style was born. So “CAP” started with no script, but a handful of leading local actors and young talent who worked with Tony as they developed their characters. This was followed by improvised acting sessions, and gradually a script was born. This technique was used in countless other Banyan series and programmes such as “Morral”, “Epiphany” and a similar collaborative approach was used in the “Gayelle” magazine series and the award winning “And The Dish Ran Away With The Spoon” with the wonderful pairing of Tony and Errol Sitahal. 

Tony played the leading role in the local film, “Obeah” (1987) – initially known as “The Haunting of Avril” – which was directed by Hugh Robertson ( of “Bim”). Unfortunately, the film is still awaiting post-production funds, and it would be a great tribute to Tony if the Government or private sector would pay for the completion of this film. The trinidad+tobago film festival would love to screen it! 

Tony always had great plans to complete major film projects such as a film version of his play, “Jean and Dinah”, and a major documentary on the life of Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael). Unfortunately, he did not receive the support for these and many other worthy cultural projects which he developed. 

At the height of Banyan’s success, I mused on the role of the main contributors and recognised that while each of us (Tony, Christopher Laird and I) had unique skills and talents, you couldn’t compare our individual accomplishments to the energy and creativity that emerged when we worked together as Banyan. I said it was like the Beatles. Tony laughed.

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Michael Tony Hall was a Trinidadian actor, playwright, director and presenter. Among his many achievements, in 2002, Hall, Bruce Paddington and Christopher Laird, as Banyan, received the Vanguard Award from the National Drama Association for innovative ground-breaking television. Tony Hall, who was 71, died of a heart attack 27 April, 2020.  

Photograph © Abigail Hadeed, Splice Studios

#WatchAMovieOnUS: Online Screening Series

Looking for a way to beat the cabin fever of ‘self-isolation’?

ttff is delighted to present the #WatchAMovieOnUs: online screening series, in partnership with NGC (The National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago).

As part of our fifteenth anniversary celebrations, from 28 March to 10 April, ttff will stream fourteen trinidad+tobago film festival favourites—one per day—for free via the ttff website. Films will be available for 24 hours each.

Our screening schedule will be posted to the ttff Facebook page over the next few days, so check out and follow our event page at: https://www.facebook.com/events/220642585807814/

Announcing the ttff/20 Call for Submissions

UPDATE: 22 May – the 2020 ttff call for submissions has now closed.

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ttff/20 celebrating 15 years in 2020!

Port of Spain, Monday 03 February 2020: The trinidad+tobago film festival is pleased to announce the call for submissions for our 15th anniversary festival, ttff/20! Submissions can be made through our festival portal on Film Freeway.

The ttff seeks to highlight excellence in filmmaking through the exhibition of fiction and documentary feature and short films made in Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean and its diaspora. The Festival therefore accepts submissions from Caribbean filmmakers in the region and in the diaspora; and international filmmakers with films from or about the Caribbean or its diaspora. Submissions must have been completed after 01 January 2018. For full submission guidelines and categories, please visit our portal on Film Freeway.

ttff/20 will include new shorts, and features, narrative films, documentaries and experimental films, which explore the Caribbean experience. As always, the festival will include curated film screenings at Movietowne (Port of Spain, San Fernando and Tobago) and a programme of outdoor screenings of favourite classics, People’s Choice and jury award-winning films.

In 2020 we’re also launching a new submission and prize category for student filmmakers (whether secondary or tertiary) to encourage and support the early careers of emerging talent.

Our training and professional development programmes will continue to be a core offering of ttff in 2020, with the launch of Masterclasses (intensive 3-day workshops led by international industry professionals), the re-introduction of filmmaker panels, and continuing our introductory industry workshops, and youth-focused mentorship and training.

If you have any questions or concerns, please visit our frequently asked questions or drop us a line at hello@ttfilmfestival.com.

Please click the button below to submit your film to ttff/20 via FilmFreeway.

Kicking off ttff/20!

Gone but Not Forgotten

Ray Funk helps to kick off ttff’s 15th anniversary year!

The trinidad+tobago film festival is delighted to reprise beloved carnival aficionado, Ray Funk’s video presentation and talk, ‘Gone But Not Forgotten’, as part of our 15th anniversary celebrations! On 12 February at the National Museum and Art Gallery, Funk will be presenting a celebration of pan pioneers who have passed away. The presentation will include a newly discovered ten minute film called ‘Panboo’ (shot in 1954),​ as well as clips of pan visionaries Ellie Mannette, Kim Loy Wong, Cliff Alexis, Pat Bishop, Ken ‘Professor’ Philmore, Clyde Bradley and Jit Samaroo. This presentation was first offered as part of the film festival’s numerous programs last August at Carifesta.

This programme represents Funk’s desire to offer, in one event, an opportunity to let his audience hear and see these pioneers of pan talk, and look at rare clips of pan in concert, festival, and on the streets at Carnival. “I want to let the history of pan unfold from the voices of the icons who contributed to its history.” The clips come from various films, television programmes and private sources. They are primarily from Ray Funk’s own collection with assistance from Christopher Laird of Banyan Archives and Timmy Mora of Visual Arts and Production.

Since CARIFESTA, Funk has continued to search for more rare early footage and is excited to screen what he believes is the first film about steelpan. He found a newspaper clipping in a Canadian newspaper from 1955 referring to this short film, and arranged for it to be digitised from an archive.  He only got a copy several weeks ago and is very excited to share it. “Before Panboo, there were a couple very short clips of steelbands in newsreels, but this is the first film about pan. It features the Woodbrook band, Dixie Stars, who had traveled to Toronto as the first Esso Steel Band and later settled in Bermuda. It traces the evolution of pan from skin drums to steel, and it seems to have only ever had a few public showings in Canada back in the 1950s. I believe it is the first time anyone has seen this film in over sixty years!”

Ray Funk has done a number of previous presentations for the trinidad+tobago film festival of historic film clips on Trinidad Carnival, calypso, pan and mas. A retired Alaskan trial judge, Funk has been coming to Trinidad regularly for over two decades, primarily during carnival. He has written dozens and dozens of articles for all three Trinidad daily newspapers, co-written books on Invaders and Northern Illinois Steelband, and been a Fulbright US scholar. 

Gone But Not Forgotten is presented in partnership with The National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago Limited (NGC), The National Museum and Art Gallery of Trinidad and Tobago and The Central Bank Museum

12 February 2020, 6pm-8pm
National Museum and Art Gallery, Frederick Street, Port of Spain

This event is free and open to the public. All are welcome!

ttff/20 Dates Announced!

Filmmakers and film festival fans! Announcing the dates of ttff/20: 09-15 September 2020, so save the date! 2020 marks the 15th anniversary of the trinidad+tobago film festival, so we have a lot to celebrate! 

We will be opening our formal call for submissions via Film Freeway in early February, so stay tuned to our website and social media for updates on submissions, special events and more! #ttff20 #15in2020

And the ttff/19 Winners are…

The votes are in and audiences have spoken – the winners of ttff/19’s People’s Choice awards are as follows:

Spirit of the Caribbean: Charlie’s Records, directed by Tina Charles
Best Feature: Grace and Saleem, directed by Jian Hennings
Best Short: Sampson’s Heart, directed by Juliette McCawley

Warmest congratulations to the casts and crews of the winning films! Awardees receive ttff/19 carifesta edition trophies and a cash prizes sponsored by Shell and the trinidad+tobago film festival.

World Premiere of Queen of Soca

from left to right: director of Queen of Soca, Kevin Adams; Minister of Community Development, Culture and the Arts, Dr Nyan Gadsby Dolly; singer and star of QoS, Terri-Ann Lyons

Members of the film and television fraternity, ttff/19 sponsors, supporters, movie lovers and the cast and crew of the featured film gathered at NAPA on Wednesday 21 August to celebrate the world premiere of ‘Queen of Soca’ during the trinidad+tobago film festival.

Directed by Kevin Adams and produced by Christopher Din Chong, with support from the New World Film Centre and a Take One grant from the Ministry of Community Development, Culture and the Arts, ‘Queen of Soca’ – tells the story of Olivia (Terri-Ann Lyons), a young woman with a natural gift for singing who believes her passion for Soca music can change her life – opened to an enthusiastic and appreciative audience.

Paddington Passes the ttff Baton

On Wednesday 21 August, during his usual welcome address at ttff’s signal event, the world premiere of ‘Queen of Soca’, festival founder and director, Dr. Bruce Paddington, announced that we would be leaving the film festival to pursue other projects. In so doing, he passed the baton of the festival FILMCO: the Filmmakers’ Collaborative of Trinidad and Tobago.

“Now is the time to pass the baton over to four talented and committed members of the Filmmakers collaborative who will take over the management of ttff (and in fact have been undertaking this role for much of ttff 2019),” Paddington remarked. “I will be available as a consultant or Professor Emeritus and hope to continue to co executive produce another three local feature films as part of the activities of the not for profit New World Film Centre…”

Following Paddington’s speech, the new interim director of ttff, and founding member of FILMCO, Mariel Brown, observed that, “We have huge shoes to fill! Over the fourteen years of its existence, the film festival has built a beloved and established brand that mans a great deal to very many people (including me). Thank you Bruce, for your vision and determination. Thank you to the incredible team you helped put together: Annabelle, Melvina, Emilie, Marina, Jonathan, Magella, Nneka, Melanie and so many more. I promise, we’ll do our level best to maintain and build on what you have created. And we look forward to the 15th anniversary of the festival, which we’ll celebrate in 2020!”

FILMCO will take over the management of ttff from September 2019.