Tribeca Festival Announces The Winners

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The Tribeca Festival announces some of this year's greatest filmmakers, step inside the event, and take a look. 


The Beauty of Blackness” is a Tribeca X 2022 Winner in the Tribeca X feature film category!

The relaunch of Fashion Fair opens the door to the intimate, professional, and the gift and beauty and being a woman. Fashion Fair, is the history of a black woman's beauty. A documentary, produced in partnership with Sephora, Digitas, Vox Creative, Ventureland, and Epic Stories.

The Beauty of Blackness event 

Photos courtesy of Digitas


Tribeca - ALLS WELL wins Best Screenplay in a US Feature.

Directed by Ben Snyder

Written by Ben Snyder and Elizabeth Rodriguez

Dramedy

US Narrative Competition

Three Nuyorican sisters move through the difficult task of life, of being a single mom while embracing the gift of womanhood, family, and career, this film is filled with real-life circumstances, harmonious moments, and the comfort and support of sisterhood.

ALLS WELL Film stills, covers, and photos courtesy of Brigade Publicity.


The Bolivian Film THE VISITOR Wins the

Best Screenplay Award in the International Narrative Competition at the 2022 Tribeca Festival

A contemplative and strong view of family relationships, and differences of the rising dominance and existence of Evangelism in Bolivia. A film that will make you Think about the laws of religious freedom. Director: Martín Boulocq; Script: Martín Boulocq and Rodrigo Hasbún.

Photo courtesy of Cinema Tropical


Tribeca FF 2022- THE WILD ONE Wins Best 

Paris-based Director Tessa Louise-Salomé's Tribeca 2022 Documentary Competition title THE WILD ONE has just been announced as the WINNER of BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY IN A DOCUMENTARY FEATURE. Narrated by: Willem Dafoe.

THE WILD ONE illuminates the travels of a perplexing artist, Jack Garfein a Holocaust survivor, acclaimed Broadway director, co-founder of Actors Studio West, and contentious filmmaker.  

This film explores how his background in the concentration camps shaped his idea of working as a survival mechanism and drove his focus toward themes of violence, control, and discrimination in postwar America in two explosive films "The Strange One" (1957) and "Something Wild" (1961).

This film is a must-see.

 

Director Tessa Louise Salome phototo Credit: Carole Hamy

Jack Garfein in Te-Photo credit: Petite Maison Production

The Wild One.








More winners announcements coming soon!

Written by Anita Johnson-Brown, Editor

  

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