Backseat Film Festival

The Backseat Film Festival is an independent film festival organized by Doug Sakmann, Nick Esposito, and Zafer Ulkucu.[1]

Beginning in Park City, Utah, during the winter of 2003 as one of many alternatives to the Sundance Film Festival it quickly transformed into a touring festival that continues to the present day.[2]

During the summer of 2003 the festival joined forces with the Vans Warped Tour and its screening bus, the Dirty Erin, traveled through 44 cities across North America playing films for tens of thousands of young people. Doug Sakmann, former Festival Director for the Troma Films' Tromadance Film Festival, filmed a slasher film series Punk Rock Holocaust during this tour which garnered international press attention for the festival.[3][4]

Backseat is currently based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The touring festival travels across the U.S. each year screening films for those interested in edgy, alternative indy films. It has also showcased its film lineup at the Cannes Film Festival.

gollark: In this case, basically "undermine security and provide data to the government".
gollark: And it's more significant than that; encrypted stuff is basically, well, half the reason the modern internet works, and backdooring it is impractical *and* bad.
gollark: It was rushed through because of "increased risk of terrorist attacks around Christmas" or something.
gollark: Alternatively they'll just not be based in Australia and hope that nobody notices the lack of backdoors in them.
gollark: I expect they'll be around but backdoored to death.

References

  1. "A home at last for local directors and their films". Daily Magazine. The Philadelphia Inquirer. 2008-07-15. Archived from the original on 2008-07-17. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  2. "The Backseat Gets Messy Every Month in New York". Headlines. Film Threat. 2003-06-11. Archived from the original on 2007-08-22. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  3. Martens, Todd (14 July 2003). "Warped Tour Bands Team For Film". Billboard. p. 27.
  4. Staff Writer (27 September 2003). "Murder Most Horrid". Kerrang UK. p. 6.


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