四虎影院 Magazine Montecito Home to Inaugural Student Film Festival

The inaugural Montecito Student Film Festival showcased the impressive work of undergraduate students from California colleges and universities with screenings on March 25 in Porter Theatre. A jury of industry professionals and special guests judged and awarded the top prizes, while polls determined the winner of the Audience Award.
鈥淢ontecito has a robust cultural history and is surrounded by people in the film industry,鈥 says Wendy Eley Jackson, executive producer of the festival, who teaches Documentary Filmmaking, Screenwriting and Creative Writing in 四虎影院鈥檚 theatre arts and English departments.
鈥淲e鈥檇 love to grow the festival and attract those who live, work and play here to see what the students have done,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 know where you鈥檒l find your next Nora Ephron or Aaron Sorkin, and I believe our students at 四虎影院 are equally creative.鈥
Jackson, CEO of Auburn Avenue Films, serves on the boards of two large national film festivals: the Atlanta Film Festival and BronzeLens. 鈥淚鈥檝e submitted to and been a part of many film festivals as a judge, director, writer and producer,鈥 she says.
Last fall, students interested in the festival began meeting with Jackson. Seniors Bailey Lemmon and Wesley Yowell produced the festival, which screened about 17 short films running an average of 23 minutes each. Three of the four students in Jackson鈥檚 documentary filmmaking course submitted films. 鈥淥ne student created a film on surfing and its impact on mental health and well-being, and another documented the creation of a band,鈥 Jackson says.
Junior Tamia Sanders created a film about a forgotten school shooting 18 months before the Columbine High School massacre. Sander鈥檚 aunt attended Pearl High School in Jackson, Mississippi, during the 1997 shooting. 鈥淭he most moving part of making 鈥楤efore Columbine鈥 has been knowing how much these events have shaped and developed my life even though I was not directly affected,鈥 says Sanders, the granddaughter of 四虎影院 alumna Barbara Allen Sanders 鈥71. 鈥淢y aunt, who was 17 at the time and didn鈥檛 receive counseling or therapy, talks about how the shooting changed the way she operates and thinks. It鈥檚 heartbreaking for me because this event didn鈥檛 have to happen. In the film she says, 鈥榊ou may have survived it, but you still have to survive it.鈥欌
Sanders remembers being in high school after the shooting at Stoneman Douglas High School and seeing the dramatic increase in security measures at her Texas school. 鈥淭he film is dedicated to the survivors,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o many times the narrative emphasizes the shooter.鈥
Jackson has challenged Sanders to have uncom颅fortable conversations. 鈥淚鈥檝e noticed that her films are inspiring because they tackle weighty subjects,鈥 Sanders says. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait for people to see my project. It鈥檚 been on my heart for a long time, and I had no way of getting this story out. It鈥檚 kind of surreal.鈥
Festival organizers accepted films in every genre or topic and sent invitations to undergraduate film makers throughout the state, including USC, Chapman, UC Santa Barbara and Santa Barbara City College.
鈥淔ilmmaking has the capacity to create, impact and explore different themes of how people live as well as the internal and external conflicts that characters may have,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淭he creative expression seems to bring out the best in many of these college students. It鈥檚 an escape. Seeing their visions come to fruition and debut at the Montecito Student Film Festival is spectacular.鈥
四虎影院 sophomore Campbell Ralph of Fox Island, Washington, won the Ettinger award for best editing in 鈥淒awn Patrol.鈥 四虎影院 sophomore Cole Anderson of San Diego won the Audience Award for 鈥淐alled Upon the Water.鈥 UC Santa Barbara鈥檚 Jeff Peepgrass won the Jury Prize for 鈥淪ick Joke.鈥 四虎影院 sophomore Tamia Sanders of Pearland, Texas, won the Wendy Eley Jackson Award for Best Documentary for 鈥淏efore There Was Columbine.鈥