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Local filmmaker's work to be screened at NYC film festival

North Bay filmmaker Kevin Hoffman’s short film titled ‘Shackville’ has been selected for a screening in New York City at the prestigious Rural Route International Film Festival on Sunday August 7th.



North Bay filmmaker Kevin Hoffman’s short film titled ‘Shackville’ has been selected for a screening in New York City at the prestigious Rural Route International Film Festival on Sunday August 7th.

Shackville, a 3 minute flick filmed in Callander, is about the arrival of spring on the lonely shore lined with ice fishing shacks waiting to be hauled home and a young girl who discovers a world of mystery as the shacks and their inhabitants come to life.

“For a few precious moments, she is swept away to a different place.”

Watch Shackville Here


Background on the festival:

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The Rural Route Film Festival was created to highlight works that deal with rural people and places. While the term “rural” is defined by Webster’s Dictionary as: 1) Of or relating to the country: RUSTIC 2) Of or relating to people who live in the country 3) Of or relating to farming: AGRICULTURAL, the creators of Rural Route Film Festival leave it up to you, the film and video artists, to explain your own definition of “rural.” Whether it be a documentary about an organic turnip farm in West Virginia, a fictional backpacking drama set in Peru, or a personal/experimental work about life in a small town in Wisconsin, we want to see and hear what you have to say. Works that include alternative country, country western, and folk music are encouraged, as are those that play loud rock in cornfields.

Since 2002, the Rural Route Film Festival has been centered in New York City, where both founders (originally from Iowa) met working in the film industry. While having a rural festival in one of the world’s largest cities is an oxymoron, the irony proved to work, bringing in submissions from all around the world and attracting city slickers who were curious about the country, and country folk who had moved to the city but wanted to reconnect with home. Rural Route has been effective in creating a like-minded community of filmmakers. Unlike most festivals that operate under a general theme of ‘independent film,’ Rural Route’s specific focus on rurality has allowed us to place similar artists together whose work might otherwise be ignored or lost within the programming of broader based festivals. Filmmakers under the Rural Route umbrella are able to network through each other, discuss/critique one another’s work, and crew on one another’s projects. Many filmmakers have premiered their work at Rural Route and gone on to win awards through festival runs domestically and abroad, have their work screened through television outlets such as IFC and PBS, and have their films picked-up by independent distributors.

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