Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Watch Trailer: Local Documentary Nabs Four Awards In The Film Festival Circuit

Darpan News Desk, 16 Oct, 2018 03:49 PM
    My Name Was January has won four awards and semi-finalists since its release to film festivals in September 2018. 
     
     
     
    AWARD WINNERS
     
    •         Award of Recognition – LGBT, Best Shorts Competition, La Jolla, California
    •         Best Documentary Short Film, Aphrodite Film Awards, New York City
    •         Best LGBTQ Film, Los Angeles Film Awards, Los Angeles
    •         Best Documentary – Gold Award, Los Angeles Shorts Awards, Los Angeles
     
     
    SEMI-FINALIST
     
    •         Best North American Documentary, Alternative Film Festival, Toronto
    •         Semi-Finalist, Hollywood International Moving Pictures Film Festival, Los Angeles
     
     
     
    When a trans sister, January Marie Lapuz, is brutally murdered in her own home in New Westminster, BC, a community reacts and her friends and other trans women of colour come to share and voice their issues, concerns, and challenges. January was seen as a bright light in the lives of many. This is the story of January, a friend, a daughter, a person.
     
     
    This film will not only bring justice to January, but to all the women who have lost their lives. January had a beautiful soul, and now part of her soul rests in each and every one of us.
     
     
    The film is directed by two former Kwantlen Polytechnic University Journalism students Elina Gress and Lenee Son. The film is produced by the Sher Vancouver LGBTQ Friends Society, specifically Sher Vancouver Founder Alex Sangha and Sher Vancouver President Ash Brar. “I feel January is watching over us like our Angel in Heaven.  I feel she is blessing the film and helping us spread her message of love and light,” says Sher Vancouver Founder Alex Sangha.
     
     
    The film has been selected into an amazing 11 film festivals since its release in September 2018.
     
     
    The exclusive Canadian rights of the film for the educational market has also been acquired by Moving Images Distribution which is a local non-profit social justice distributor in Vancouver.  A discussion guide for teachers has been prepared to go with the film. 
     
     
    The film will be formally released for sale to high schools, colleges, and universities in January 2019.  Pre-order and advance copies will be available prior to the New Year.
     
     

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Book V/s Kindle

    Book V/s Kindle
    Paper or plasma – if you’re a reader, this question has plagued you at least once in your life. But which is better? 

    Book V/s Kindle

    Have some fun this summer

    Have some fun this summer

    Like most things in Vancouver, summer activities often come with a price tag! If you want to make...

    Have some fun this summer

    Komagata Maru: Moving Past An Apology

    Komagata Maru: Moving Past An Apology

      While the apology marks a historic and significant moment in Canadian history and can ...

    Komagata Maru: Moving Past An Apology

    Male And Female Brains React Differently To Stress

    Male And Female Brains React Differently To Stress
    Offering new evidence to show that male and female brains are wired differently, new research has found that a brain region involved with stress and keeping heart rate and blood pressure high work differently in men and women.

    Male And Female Brains React Differently To Stress

    Jazz Most Certainly for the Ages

    Jazz Most Certainly for the Ages
    Young performers recognized by the TD Niagara Jazz Festival

    Jazz Most Certainly for the Ages

    SHIAMAK Students Make Canada Funk It Up!

    SHIAMAK Students Make Canada Funk It Up!
    This year, once again the audiences were entertained to inspiring, and engaging performances by toddlers of four to seniors at eighty-four.

    SHIAMAK Students Make Canada Funk It Up!