Here Alone, an independent film by Rod Blackhurst ’02, won the Tribeca Film Festival’s Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature last week.
magazine described the production as “a taut, lean, unfussy film about a lone woman surviving in the wild woods of upstate New York.” Meanwhile, Maxim magazine wrote that the “”
In the movie, a young woman struggles to survive on her own in the wake of a mysterious, zombie-spawning epidemic that has decimated society and forced her deep into the unforgiving wilderness. The film was entirely self-financed (in part through a ) and even self-cast — the lead actress, Lucy Walters, was approached via Twitter messages from Blackhurst.
Blackhurst, a French literature graduate, says:
“We thought Here Alone would appeal to fans of well-crafted psychological dramatic thrillers and elevated genre films — again showing our understanding of what it requires to tell a simple and powerful story.”
Tribeca audiences clearly agreed, giving Blackhurst and his crew the coveted top prize.
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Co-founded by Craig Hatkoff ’76, the Tribeca Film Festival saw controversy this year when the film Vaxxed was removed from the screening schedule. Professor Penny Lane to screen the documentary, and numerous national and international media outlets quoted her words.
, “The reaction on Twitter, Facebook, and social media platforms was intense. The decision [to include the film] also was criticized in the creative community, with documentary filmmaker Penny Lane (Our Nixon) writing an open letter to the the festival saying that including Vaxxed threatened its credibility.”
CBS News included Lane’s words in as did the , , the , and .
In a fourth Tribeca- connection, The Return, which won the audience award in the documentary category, will soon air on the PBS series POV, produced by Chris White ’91.
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