American Film Renaissance

American Film Renaissance (AFR) was a non-profit film institute best known for its conservative/libertarian film festivals, held annually in different locations.

Mission

AFR's mission was to celebrate "timeless American values by producing, showcasing and distributing films that promoted freedom (including free speech, free enterprise, and freedom of worship), rugged individualism, and triumph of the human spirit". AFR was founded by small business owner Jim Hubbard and his attorney wife Ellen Hubbard. The first AFR festival premiered in September, 2004 in Dallas, Texas and received extensive press coverage.[1] Aside from Dallas, AFR also hosted festivals in Hollywood, California, Traverse City, Michigan and Washington, D.C. At its festivals, AFR screened feature films such as The World's Fastest Indian starring Anthony Hopkins and documentaries such as The Bituminous Coal Queens of Pennsylvania produced by Patricia Heaton. Films at AFR film festivals were screened at several well-known venues such as the Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles and The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington. Celebrities who appeared at AFR events included Heaton, Gary Sinise, Robert Davi, and Tony Shalhoub.[2]

In 2007, AFR expanded into documentary film production with their first film Museum of Government Waste and in 2008, into filmmaker training programs. One notable AFR training graduate was Rich Middlemas, producer of the 2011 Academy Award Winner for Best Documentary, Undefeated.[3][4]

gollark: I am SERIOUSLY CONSIDERING partly rewriting my application to use Redux to hopefully make state management in it less problematic.
gollark: You should use RPNCalc's x86 target.
gollark: Æ writing this application to be better is hard.
gollark: > if one is going to be an overlord it's important to be regarded as an evil overlord because then when you want to enact policy that has immediate costs and long-term benefits, instead of having to tediously, endlessly justify why it's good you can just be like "[REDACTED] you i'm evil"Does this explain LyricLy?
gollark: Unfortunately discord message limits prevent that.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.