FFF18 Celebrates Short Films

The Fargo Film Festival is proud to announce Short Stories, a showcase of acclaimed short films on Wednesday, March 21.

While not frequently found onscreen in American cinemas, short format films are audience favorites and a calling card of the festival experience. Thriving within the restrictions of limited runtime and humble budgets, short film artists tell compelling stories and introduce unforgettable characters.

The FFF’s Short Stories showcase offers a diverse slate of programming including animation, narrative, and documentary films.

The evening begins with the animated “Catherine” by Britt Raes, followed by Ted M. Larson Award-recipient Mike Scholtz’s “Kinderchomper” and Isabelle Sophie Aroue’s “Paulette in Paris.”

Filmmakers from three of the films will be present to answer questions from the audience. Additional highlights include “Just Go!,” an action-packed film inspired by the true story of a young man who lost both of his legs in a childhood accident. When thieves snatch a woman’s purse, the young man pursues them in a breathless chase featuring unforgettable stunt work.

The showcase will culminate with the FM premiere of “Last Dance at Johnson’s Barn,” a touching tribute to a North Dakota institution.
Since 1952, generations of families have attended dances at Johnson’s Barn. The barn is an icon on the prairie — so integral to the community fabric that scarcely a family in the region can’t trace a courtship or marriage back to the barn. But when farm owner Brian Johnson falls ill, he and his family face a heartbreaking decision.

The Short Stories showcase will screen on Wednesday, March 21, 2018 beginning at 7:00 p.m. at the Fargo Theatre. Tickets are now available at the Fargo Theatre box office.

FFF18 Lunch Panels Announced

The Fargo Film Festival is proud to announce the lineup of lunch panels for 2018.

All lunch panels take place at noon at Dempsey’s Public House on Broadway, just a few steps from the Fargo Theatre. Tickets for individual lunch panels are ten dollars each and supply is limited.

The panels include:

Thursday, March 22nd
Acting for the Silver Screen, moderated by Matt Olien.
Panelists include actors Marcienne Dwyer from “Ruin Me,” Paul Bailey from “A Jerry Amongst Jerrys” and Bates Wilder from “Tater Tot and Patton.”

Friday, March 23rd
Writing the Narrative Feature, moderated by Tom Brandau.
Panelists include Andrew Zilch (“A Crooked Somebody”), Andrew Kightlinger (“Tater Tot and Patton”), Trysta Bissett (“Ruin Me”), and Preston DeFrancis (“Ruin Me”).

Saturday, March 24th
Women in Film: Indies and Industry, moderated by Trina Spaeth.
Panelists include Trysta Bissett (“Ruin Me”), Emily Sheskin (“JessZilla”), Marcienne Dwyer (“Ruin Me”), Amber Johnson (“Lady Lillian”) and Kyja Kristjansson-Nelson (“Hus”).

Mike Scholtz to Receive 2018 Ted M. Larson Award

Mike Scholtz will receive the 2018 Ted M. Larson Award from the Fargo Film Festival.

The award represents the festival’s highest honor, and is given to an individual whose commitment to cinema demonstrates outstanding, longtime contributions to one or more of the following areas: film education, film production, film culture, and film criticism and history.

Mike is a Wrenshall, Minnesota-based filmmaker who produces videos and TV spots for Hailey Sault, a healthcare marketing firm in Duluth.

Mike’s documentary work has screened at film festivals, movie theatres, and venues around the world including SXSW, Slamdance, the Banff Mountain Film Festival, the National Geographic Society, the Explorer’s Club and the Fargo Film Festival.

Mike’s love of film was cemented by trips to Weld Hall at Minnesota State University Moorhead, where an unforgettable character named Ted Larson hosted the Summer Cinema Series on Monday evenings. Mike went on to study film with Ted as a teaching and office assistant.

After college, Mike began making films of his own. His first documentary was about a silent film pioneer from Casselton, North Dakota who had the audacity to be a woman in an industry dominated by men. Broadcast on Prairie Public Television in 1998, “The Angela Murray Gibson Experience” featured an extensive interview with Ted Larson about the role of women in the
development of cinema.

To his neverending delight, all of Mike’s films have screened at the Fargo Theatre. “Wild Bill’s Run” followed the leader of an ill-fated Arctic snowmobile expedition who later turned to a life of crime. “Wicker Kittens” explored the world of competitive jigsaw puzzling. And “Lost Conquest” tackled the widespread myth that Viking warriors invaded the state of Minnesota on at least two separate occasions.

In 2004, Mike helped a group of friends convert a 90-year-old barn into a movie theatre where they launched the Free Range Film Festival. The festival continues to screen independent films
every summer to a dedicated audience in the heart of northeastern Minnesota’s organic farm country.

His latest film, “Kinderchomper,” profiles a mild-mannered artist from Minnesota who leads a double life as a villainous professional wrestler in Japan known for eating babies. The movie premieres at the 2018 Fargo Film Festival on Wednesday, March 21st at 7:00 p.m.