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Frame Of Mind Showcases Films From the Pegasus Festival


by Marcela Sanchez 21 Oct 2019 11:31 AM

Pegasus Film Festival is a student-run operation that serves as a platform for students to present their films.

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This week “Frame of Mind” presents films from the Pegasus Film Festival. This festival was created by filmmaker Niloo Jalilvand for students to dive into the film industry and get connected with professionals.  

This week’s Frame of Mind Episode, “Best of Pegasus Film Festival,” airs Thursday, Oct. 24, at 10 p.m. on KERA TV. And here’s this year’s Frame of Mind lineup.

These talented high school students, from various schools, created films that highlight diversity, food, and social issues. The Pegasus Film Festival not only presents the talented works of high school students, but the festival is also run by the students. “Students whose films are screened at the festival describe their experience as exhilarating, a dream come true,” says Jalilvand. “There is something empowering about watching your film on a big screen while the whole theater is engaged watching and reacting.”

Narrative

Bait, Sophie Gilmour, The Hockaday School (1st place)

Bait tells the story of a girl who has to deal with her weird, predatory boss. She can’t even talk to her mother who spends all her days obsessed with online and television shopping deals.

The Wolf and the Rabbit, Morgan McGrath, Career Center East (2nd place)

The prey and the predator have never been known to associate in a friendly setting, but The Wolf and the Rabbit brings the two together in this adorably animated film.

 

 

Pandemic, Linley Munson, Alcuin School (Honorable Mention)

A mysterious virus has taken over the world and Pandemic follows the only person who might be alive. As she reminisces how life used to be the virus is slowly taking over her body

Memorias, Jennifer Rojas, The Kinkaid School (Honorable Mention)

A mother tells her daughter a fond memory in her childhood. Later, her grandfather tells the girl the same story: same setting, same two characters, but the meaning has changed after the grandfather gives an important detail away.

Alien Homie, Sam Blumberg, Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts (Audience Choice Award)

Having an alien homie would be totally out of this world! This friendship might even last light-years, that is until the alien thinks he’s a bit cooler than his human homie.

A Crime Story , J.W. Bayonne, Lakeview Centennial High School

This funny police duo has a plan to catch the villain.
But in the end, the tables turn and you might not know who’s side to take.

I Need Space, Phoebe Knag, The Hockaday School

A young boy’s girlfriends need “space” and this boy will go to the ends of the world for her.

Documentary

Luke Chacko: The Little Kid With a Big Voice, Victoria Chikaoneka, Uplift Summit International Preparatory (1st place)

Singer-songwriter, Luke Chacko, continues to break stereotypes as the little boy who sings along to ‘Frozen.’ On top of that, he has even met and sang with his favorite singer, Edina Menzel.

 

Comfort Food, Anoushka Singhania, The Hockaday School (2nd place)

This multi-culturalism film explores several groups through the most important and primal connection within people: food. Comfort Food film explores how different groups prepare their foods and the people it brings together.

Meet Metal Bangover, Sari Wyssbrod, The Hockaday School (3rd place)

A hangover is to intoxication as a bangover is to…? Too much headbanging. Headbanging has been going on for decades but there’s a term that has finally put a name to an issue that’s rarely talked about. Meet Metal Bangover presents various artists who talk about the neck pain they experience after a heavy metal concert and some ways to take care of that bangover.

It’s My Life, Bernadette Kalala, Lincoln High School and Humanities – Communications Magnet

In our society social media is inevitable. But sometimes these platforms can begin to affect your life outside of the screen. It’s My Life highlight one girl’s testimony and how social media began controlling her mind and gaining unwanted attention.

Mental Health & Suicide Prevention PSA

Boys Will Be Boys, Angelina Velis, Ursuline Academy of Dallas (1st place)

No matter what a woman wears, where she is, whom she’s with, or what she says, she is always on alert. Boys Will Be Boys delves into the reality women face in a man’s world.

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