Northwest Vision and Media, create the bigger picture
exposures Film Festival 2007
FOUR days of screenings, special events and awards
ceremonies featuring the nation’s most promising filmmaking
talent brings exposures 2007 UK Student Film Festival to life for
it’s 14th year at Cornerhouse, Manchester between Mon 3
– Thu 6 December 2007. With 53 films competing over four
categories, the question is: Who will take home this year’s
prestigious University of Salford sponsored Grand Jury Prize &
Corona Extra Audience Award?
The documentary category came out on top last year with
Zabaleen, the story of families working Cairo’s
rubbish tips. This year’s race is wide open with strong
contenders in all sections. Menhaj Huda, producer of British drama
Kidulthood, acclaimed documentary director Kim Longinotto
and TV & film producer Sally Hibbin are this years Grand Jury
and their top film will be announced at the final evening’s
Corona Extra Best of the Fest Party.
The exposures audience are by no means just spectators. As well as
enjoying the wide selection of innovative new films on offer, each
vote they cast throughout the festival will decide who takes home
the coveted Corona Extra Audience Award. There’s also the BBC
Best of the North West award, judged by an expert panel, to
celebrate the wealth of talent on our doorstep.
From Liverpool to London and Bolton to Bournemouth, the entries
have come in from all corners of country and have been of the usual
high standard required by the selection panels. The experimental
line-up (Tue 4 December, 2pm) features abstract and non-narrative
filmmaking including one entry making innovative use of dripping
paint to characterise human emotions. The documentary category (Tue
4 December, 4pm) captures intriguing insights on camera, non more
so than ROY, the story of a former prisoner who gained
qualifications whilst serving his sentence but is still struggling
to find employment.
Competing for the MacKinnon & Saunders Animation Award (Wed 5
December, 2pm) are 16 budding animators using a variety of
techniques and materials from computer generated wizardry to good
old plasticine. YouTube favourite A Tale of Rock sees
Cornerhouse make a big screen star of a guitar wielding rodent for
what could be the first time. A double hit of drama (Wed 5
December, 6pm & Thu 6 December, 4pm) looks set to give the
judges a selection dilemma with a wealth of inspired shorts with
themes relating to family, friends and dairy farmers!
The festival kicks of in style with underexposed, showing off the
skills of filmmakers between the ages of 14-18 (Mon 3 December).
Amongst the exciting films by young people being seen for the first
time are the premiere screenings of THE C.R.U.M.P.I.T and
ORIGIN, two films developed through the LiveWire Film
Camp, a week-long summer filmmaking experience organised by
Cornerhouse.
exposures also breaches international boundaries to take in student
films from further afield. Non-competitive screenings of East Asian
Student Shorts (Tue 4 & Thu 6 December, 12noon) are brought to
Manchester by Teresa Kwong from the Hong Kong Independent Short
Film and Video Awards. European Shorts from EMERGANDSEE (Wed 5
December, 12pm) showcases work from Germany, Spain, Austria and
more.
The full programme, festival background, latest news and details of
previous winners and runners up are available at www.exposuresfilmfestival.co.uk


