Write For Us

Code Black and My Stolen Revolution from LA Film Fest

E-Commerce Solutions SEO Solutions Marketing Solutions
563 Views
Published
BYOD comes from the LA Film Fest and brings Code Black and My Stolen Revolution, plus a conversation with festival senior programmer, Maggie Mackay. Nahid Persson Sarvestani joins us to talk about her return to Iran after decades away, My Stolen Revolution. Finally, we see Code Black is a look inside the LA Hospital system filmed over six years, and director Ryan McGarry shares the story of making it.

FILM INFO:
Maggie Mackay - LAFF Senior Programmer
Maggie Mackay's interest in film developed as a small child in her hometown of New York City, where she spent hours with her mother at Film Forum, transfixed by films highly inappropriate for her young age. As an adolescent, Mackay went on to discover the (sadly) now defunct Rare Bird Video, on the corner of Broome and Wooster. There she spent an equally inordinate amount of time in the store's odd smelling but deeply inspirational basement, which housed thousands of titles (most of which were old or obscure) and a remarkably patient staff that never kicked her out.
Mackay holds a Bachelor's Degree in English and Film Studies from the University of Delaware, and a Master's degree in Literature and Film Studies from Claremont Graduate University. She has worked as a freelance programmer and writer, script reader, Hollywood Assistant, on-set Production Coordinator, and Senior Coordinator of the Sundance Documentary Fund. Mackay joined Film Independent in 2003.
MY STOLEN REVOLUTION: Nahid Persson Sarvestani
Thirty years after narrowly escaping Iran and impending imprisonment during The 1979 revolution, filmmaker and activist Nahid Persson Sarvestani sets out to find the friends she left behind. Through the harrowing stories of the women who were not as fortunate as she, Persson is led to her own redemption.
After recent protests in Iran awaken Filmmaker Nahid Persson Sarvestani's memories to a time when as a young activist she fled after the 1979 revolution, she begins a quest to find her surviving friends. Haunted by the guilt of abandoning her imprisoned friends and her brother, Rostam, who was later executed, she finally finds them and learns about their horrific torture and about Rostam's final days.
Returning to the Los Angeles Film Festival, documentarian Persson Sarvestani presents a deeply moving, intensely personal narrative that unfolds as she reunites with an astonishingly open and eloquent group of women. Through their stories, which reconstruct a shared past equal parts harrowing and inspiring, Persson Sarvestani is led to her own redemption.
CODE BLACK: Ryan McGarry
First time filmmaker Ryan McGarry is also a doctor at the hospital and took his camera to work during the four years of his residency. With CODE BLACK, he provides deeply personal insight into the triumphs and difficulties he and his fellow residents who train and work at LA County Hospital face on a daily basis. As they are forced to confront the unexpected realities of life and death in a safety net hospital and a healthcare system at the brink of overload, many of them question their own sense of identities as doctors and what it means to practice medicine within the bureaucracy of modern medicine.

ADD'L LINKS:
www.mystolenrevolution.com/‎
http://codeblackmovie.com/
https://www.facebook.com/codeblackmovie
BYOD Full Episodes Playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vR_VRiaS3Jk&list=PLF1172812B8D89DC0
BYOD Short Clips Playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJNee5G6AWc&list=PLjk3H0GXhhGfH8WTTVnr_8vzWUQ6CfSS_
https://www.facebook.com/BYODOC
https://www.facebook.com/thelip.tv

EPISODE BREAKDOWN:
00:01 Welcome to BYOD from LAFF.
01:20 Welcoming Maggie Mackay.
15:20 My Stolen Revolution, with Nahid Persson Sarvestani.
32:39 Code Black, with Ryan McGarry.
Category
Documentary
Be the first to comment