The Carrboro Film Fest is not like other film festivals. When he took over as director of the festival some four years ago, Bradley Bethel made sure that was true.
Sure, Carrboro could have a festival that shows a slew of international features, or one that brings in movies aiming for Oscar nominations. But Bethel saw it as something that could fill a void 鈥 a place that provided a platform for southern filmmakers and films about the South.
鈥淎ll of our films that we select have some connection to the South. That was the major change I made when I became director. I really wanted to do something different. I really wanted to give Carrboro Film Fest a more focused mission and identity,鈥 Bethel said. 鈥淐arrboro is a great place for a film festival, because it's a really artsy and engaged town. I really want the festival to be a venue for both celebrating and interrogating southern culture.鈥
All of our films that we select have some connection to the South...I really wanted to give Carrboro Film Fest a more focused mission and identity.Bradley Bethel
The Carrboro Film Fest returns for its 17th year this weekend, opening Friday evening and closing on Sunday. The festival this year features two full-length features 鈥 which will open and close the festival 鈥 and more than 40 short films, which have been grouped together in themed blocks.
And almost half of those films, Bethel says, are based in North Carolina.
鈥淭hat's significant because we didn't set out to do that,鈥 Bethel said. 鈥淥ur goal is to screen the best southern films that we can find. So, I think it speaks a lot about how good the filmmaking in North Carolina is right now.鈥
All films will screen at The ArtsCenter in Carrboro, and tickets are . Folks attending the film festival need to wear a mask during screenings and provide proof of vaccination against COVID-19 or recent negative test.
鈥淚 do think it is unique,鈥 Bethel said of the festival. 鈥淥ur programming is high quality, but also regional and local. And you get that in an intimate setting where the audiences get to meaningfully interact with the filmmakers. It's really easy to connect with the filmmakers.鈥
Folks in the audience should be able to recognize various locations in the festival鈥檚 opening film, 鈥淭ableau.鈥 It鈥檚 the first feature for Chapel Hill native and UNC graduate Stuart Howes, and was filmed at a few locations in the Chapel Hill and Carrboro area, including the Carolina Coffee Shop and the Weaver Street Market. Its run time is under two hours, and Howes and members of the cast will participate in a Q&A after the screening.
Bethel said tickets for 鈥淭ableau鈥 are almost sold out.
鈥淭he director, Stuart Howes, even describes the film as a love letter to Chapel Hill and Carrboro. So, it鈥檚 very local,鈥 Bethal said. 鈥淎nd at the same time, it鈥檚 a good film. It鈥檚 a thought-provoking family drama. We鈥檙e really excited to be the local premiere of the film.鈥
Watch the new teaser trailer for TABLEAU, starring Sofia Smith, Amy Davis, Katie Bezilla, Cade Gass, and Dimi Bissig. Written and directed by Stuart Howes.
— TableauMovie (@TableauMovie)
The festival will close on Sunday night with a screening of a documentary, 鈥淭he Smell of Money.鈥 It was written and produced by North Carolina native Jamie Berger and focuses on the story of Elsie Herring and her fight against Smithfield Foods and the pork industry in eastern North Carolina. The film dives into aspects of environmental racism, pollution and community activism.
Berger鈥檚 film has already been shown at several film festivals and has taken home a handful of awards. It was an audience favorite at the HotDocs Festival, won the Jury Prize for Documentary Feature at the Sarasota Film Festival, won for Best Feature Documentary at the Bushwick Film Festival, and won for Best Life & Liberty Film at the Sidewalk Film Festival in Birmingham, Alabama.
Executive producers credited for their work on the film include Kate Mara (House of Cards) and David Lowery (The Green Knight). After the screening on Sunday, Berger will participate in a Q&A with the audience.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a really great and well-made documentary, and it also hits home,鈥 Bethel said. 鈥淲e are still not yet serious enough about climate change and environmental issues, and this film confronts some of those issues head-on here in our own state.鈥
Saturday and Sunday at the film festival are filled with themed groupings of short films. One on Saturday is dedicated to stories that don鈥檛 get told enough, while another focuses on documentary shorts.
鈥淥ur Saturday night block called 鈥楳agnetism鈥 is a really compelling and eclectic mix of short films,鈥 Bethel said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no one way to be southern or experience the South. I think we really do represent the diversity of the southern experience.鈥
One block of films 鈥 beginning Sunday at 2:15 p.m. 鈥 will be preceded by a special presentation from photographers Alex Harris and Margaret Sartor about their new book, 鈥淥ur Strange New Land: Narrative Movie Sets in the American South.鈥
鈥淣ot only is it a block of fascinating and really well done, really beautifully-made short films, but (Harris) is going to be presenting some of his photographs,鈥 Bethel said. 鈥淭hey're beautiful photographs and his experience spending years on movie sets is going to be really interesting to hear.鈥
For more information about the films and tickets, visit .