Zero Film Festival: 6 years, 10 locations, 3 countries. Zero Film Festival is the only film festival exclusive to truly independent, self financed film. Ever growing and expanding, Zero Film Festival opens conversations between the international film communities and provides a platform to develop filmmakers audiences. Welcome to the LA edition 2013.
Zero Film Festival, Los Angeles 2013: 17/18 April 2013
Venues: The Rooftop at The Standard, Downtown LA; Space 15Twenty (Urban Outfitters) Hollywood; The Regal Cinema (LA Live) Downtown
A film written and directed by: Samuel Michael Casebolt
Friday, December 21st 8 pm
"Penny is running from her life. Rob is her life. And Earth is about to leave it's orbit around the Sun. Now they must decide what is most important to them in the short time they have left." Facebook.com/GoodbyeSunMovie
Space 15 Twenty 1520 N. Cahuenga Blvd. Los Angeles 90028
Videos with King Tuff, Dunes, Fidlar, Black Lips, Audacity, Best Coast, Bleached, Dum Dum Girls, Two Gallants, Wavves, Ariel Pink, La Sera and more!
Directors: David Black, Ryan Baxley, Brian Butler, Steven Andrew Garcia, Travis Peterson, Ace Norton, Molly Schiot, Christian Turner, Vice Cooler, Alan Tanner, and Cali Thornhill Dewitt.
Free and open to the public!
Drinks by PBR, Tunes by DJ Jim Smith of the Smell plus special guests!
"A Love Letter for You" Movie Screening and Q&A with director Joey Garfield
Saturday, November 3rd screening at 7:30 pm
RSVP: Rsvp@space15twenty.com
In 1984 Steve Powers started climbing rooftops in his neighborhood and painting his alias ESPO as a dues paying member of the ICY graffiti club. 25 years later he returned home to Philadelphia in the summer of 2009 to write a love letter across the same rooftops facing the Market-Frankford line. The letter, meant for one, with meaning for all, encompasses 50 walls on a 20 block stretch of market street. Drawing input, inspiration, and work from the community Powers created a letter to and from west Philly. This unprecedented public art project was a collaboration of Powers, The Mural Arts Program, and the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage. It required 1200 cans of spray paint, 800 gallons of bucket paint, and the skilled hands of 20 of the finest spray painters in America, who Powers put into the legendary ICY club.