^ So I was at the festival for the full twelve hours. Lots of entertaining narrative shorts and a good variety of interesting documentaries, ranging in length from one to thirty minutes.
A few of my favorites:
Secret Decoder Ring (4:00) — A boy sends in his cereal boxtops for a prize with special powers.
CODA Pride (9:41) — A local 17-year-old filmmaker's documentary short about a community that I'd never really thought of before: hearing children of deaf adults.
Cycle (12:00) — A horror-comedy about a guy who gets attacked by his dirty clothes at the laundromat.
September Sketchbook (7:44) — An impressive experimental animation of flags of the world morphing into other designs and figures, made from over 5400 individual marker-on-paper drawings. I voted for this one as my favorite of the festival, partly because of my lifelong interest in vexillology, but it was a very tough decision.
Manga and anime expert Fred Schodt gave a lecture about the God of Manga, Tezuka Osamu, and showed three of his experimental films from the 1980s, including one of my all-time favorite animated shorts, Broken Down Film. It was cool to be able to see this program so soon after visiting the Tezuka Museum in Takarazuka earlier this month, and I got my copy of Schodt's Manga! Manga! The World of Japanese Comics autographed.