Berkshire International Film Festival

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. - The Berkshire International Film Festival (BIFF) today announced the selection of films that will screen from May 14 thru May 17, 2009, in Great Barrington, MA. The film festival will feature over 70 US and international award-winning independent feature films, documentaries, and shorts as well as panel discussions, Q & A sessions with filmmakers, special screenings of the finalists from the Berkshire Student Film Festival, and a special afternoon discussion with the famed NYU film professor, Richard Brown. The Festival will represent films from thirteen countries and host over two dozen filmmakers.

Venues for all of the weekend-long events and screenings will be the Triplex Cinema, the historic Mahaiwe Theatre and a free kids film morning at the Mason Library, all in downtown Great Barrington, MA.

“In this year of great political transformation, we have chosen to bookend the festival with two films that document the full spectrum of activism that has inspired change in our country over of the last 40 years”, said BIFF director Kelley Vickery.

Opening the Festival will be the grand jury nominated film from Sundance William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe. Emily and Sarah Kunstler explore the life of their father, the late radical civil rights lawyer. In the 1960s and 70s, Kunstler fought for civil rights with Martin Luther King Jr., and represented activists protesting the Vietnam War. When the inmates took over Attica prison, or Native Americans stood up to the federal government at Wounded Knee, they asked Kunstler to be their lawyer. Arthouse Pictures will release the film later this year. Sarah and Emily Kunstler and others will be in attendance. The film was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance.

The Closing Night Film presentation is The Yes Men Fix the World directed by Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno which premiered at Sundance in January and won the audience award at the prestigious Berlin Film Festival in February. Yes Men, Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno are two guys who just can't take "no" for an answer. They have an unusual hobby: posing as top executives of corporations they hate. Armed with nothing but thrift-store suits, they lie their way into business conferences and parody their corporate nemeses in ever more extreme ways - basically doing everything that they can to wake up their audiences to the danger of letting greed run our world.


Feature and documentary films from the US include, Anvil! The Story of Anvil directed by Sacha Gervasi; Burning Plain directed by Guillermo Arriaga; Emmanual Jal: War Child directed by Karim Chrobog; Food, Inc. directed by Robert Kenner; Gigantic directed by Matt Aselton; Motherhood directed by Katherine Dieckmann; Sorry, Thanks directed by Dia Sokol; The Meaning of Life directed by Hugh Brody; Milton Glaser: To Inform and Delight directed by Wendy Keys; Once More with Feeling directed by Jeff Lipsky; Pressure Cooker directed by Jennifer Grausman; Prince of Broadway directed by Sean Baker; Spike by Robert Beaucage; The Answer Man directed by John Hindman; The Garden directed by Scott Hamilton Kennedy; The Good Soldier directed by Lexy Lovell and Michael Uhys; The Reckoning directed by Pamela Yates and Paco de Onis; The Twenty directed by Chopper Bernet; The Wrecking Crew directed by Denny Tedesco; Treeless Mountain directed by So Yong Kim; and Who Do You Love? directed by Jerry Zaks.

International feature and documentary films include Alone in Four Walls  (Germany) directed by Alexander Westmeier; Azur and Asmar (France) directed by Michel Ocelot; Burma VJ (Denmark) directed by Anders Ostergaard; Children of Invention (US/Korea) directed by Tze Chun; Correction (Greece) directed by Thanos Anastopoulus; Egon and Donci (Hungary) directed by Adam Magyar; Eldorado (Belgium) directed by Bouli Lanners; In the Loop (UK) directed by Armando Iannucci; Lake Tahoe (Mexico/Spain) directed by Fernando Eimbecke; Summer Hours (France) directed by Oliver Assayas; The Country Teacher (Czech Republic) directed by Bohdan Slama; The Disappeared (Argentina) directed by Juan Mandelbaum; The End of the Line (Denmark) directed by Rupert Murray; The Girl from Monaco (France) directed by Anne Fontaine; The Glass House (US/Iran) directed by Hamid Rahmanian; and Milking the Rhino (Italy) directed by David E. Simpson.

The BIFF has chosen six Berkshire filmmakers to showcase their films including: Impulse to Soar directed by Mati Kiin; The Goodrich Project directed by Rick Derby; Poet and Poverty directed by Sean Dougherty, Tana Ross and Freke Vuijt; Animal Tricks directed by Sanjiban Sellew; Cowboy Yoga directed by Hal Clifford; Bach of the Antarctic directed by Ben Hillman; and Pretty Dead Flowers directed by Justin Liberman.

The festival will also present two short film programs, which will showcase some 28 shorts from seven countries around the world including France, Germany, Spain, Mexico, United Kingdom and Israel.
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Lanesborough Town Meeting to Vote Budget, Bylaws & Vehicle Purchases

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Tuesday's annual town meeting includes a $14 million operating budget, new short-term rentals, accessory dwelling units and sign bylaws, and free cash article appropriations.

Voters will gather at Lanesborough Elementary School on June 9 at 6 p.m. to decide on 20 warrant articles.

The fiscal 2027 budget is up a little over 10 percent. Some of the main increases are the Mount Greylock Regional School District and McCann Technical School: the McCann assessment is up more than 30 percent based on factors including enrollment and the school renovation project, and Mount Greylock's is up 11 percent.

Article 11 is for the town to vote to approve from free cash the sum of $16,298.48 for the McCann Technical School roof and window replacement project so as not to impact the budget. Article 3 is  appropriate $7,586,284 for Mount Greylock Regional School assessment.

Another notable increase was in life and health insurance, showing an increase of about 26 percent.

Ambulance Director Jen Weber is planning 24-hour coverage, which means more staff and a hike in her budget. One of the articles asks the town to appropriate $234,100 to operate the Ambulance Enterprise Fund for salaries and expenses.

Many town departments are looking for new vehicles. The Fire Department is looking to replace its outdated 1996 fire engine. There are two articles related to the truck at a total of $813,366. Article 12 would transfer $225,000 from free cash into the Fire Truck Stabilization Fund; Article 13 would transfer $605,000 from the fund and authorize the borrowing of $208,366.08.

The total includes a $100,000 contingency cost to cover any additional costs if a 2026 model-year chassis cannot be secured before new emissions standards go into effect in 2027.

The board at its last meeting moved the $225,000 transfer to come before the borrowing article, changing the stabilization number. If the $225,000 is not voted on, then they will amend the next article's number on the floor, subtracting the $225,000. This shows the borrowing number significantly lower.

Article 17 asks for the transfer of $80,000 from free cash to replace a police cruiser.

Police Chief Rob Derksen's aim is to replace one vehicle every other year, meaning the oldest vehicle gets replaced about every 10 years. 

He stressed that if delayed this year, the town may have to double up in a future year to get back on schedule, and that paying later usually costs more. The article will ask for $80,000 from free cash, the vehicles used to be funded by the BHRD.

Lastly, the Highway Department is looking to replace a 2014 International dump truck that will be a total of $330,000 and will take two to three years to receive.

Money will be used from last year's approval of $250,000 from free cash for the replacement of a 2012 highway front-end loader that was underspent $49,261. Town meeting is being asked to approve  a transfer of $53,274.85 from free cash and the use of $227,464 from funds from the Sale of Town Real Estate to fund the balance.

Other free cash proposals include $1,200 to purchase software to support tracking and ongoing maintenance schedules of town-owned vehicles; $42,000 for the replacement of the Highway Department's storage shed roof, $200,000 to reduce the tax levy.

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