Showing posts with label avant garde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avant garde. Show all posts

Monday, 20 January 2014

Afterimages interviews filmmaker Fabrizio Federico



Afterimages Issue 2 is now up online. Happy New Year's everybody!

Read about the Pink8 Manifesto and the feature film
Black Biscuit (dir: Fabrizio Federico)
http://issuu.com/afterimages/docs/afterimages2









Sunday, 13 October 2013

Hungry Eye magazine interviews director Fabrizio Federico


Hungry Eye magazine covers the feature film Black Biscuit ***No-Budget Cinema Movement ***and Pink8 manifesto

You can buy the Vol.1 / Issue 10 on their website:

http://hungryeyemagazine.com/issues/issue-10/

http://blackbiscuit101.moonfruit.com/
 
 

Thursday, 13 December 2012

Cult Cinema with director Fabrizio Federico


                        Take some time and view the visionary film Black Biscuit 
                                                  now fully on Youtube:
















Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Fabrizio Federico (Black Biscuit) Photos















Photos by 
Emma Woolridge & Annabel Fay Owens 






Monday, 15 October 2012

Black Biscuit (Full Movie)





                                                
                                                         Black Biscuit (Full Movie)








Thursday, 4 October 2012

Fabrizio Federico London Photo Shoot


Cult underground filmmaker Fabrizio Federico atop the roofs of London for the premiere of his feature film Black Biscuit at Raindance Film Festivals 20th anniversary.
















Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Fabrizio Federico at Raindance Film Festivals Press Launch


Black Biscuit will be premiering at the Raindance Film Festival on October 2nd at the Apollo Cinema.
Raindance Festival (Official Site)

Monday, 13 August 2012

'Black Biscuit' directed by Fabrizio Federico & Gutter Cinema



Film-director Fabrizio Federico's debut feature film 'Black Biscuit' has created a generation gap in cinema's guard, springing the old against the young, in an industry that has already started to seen signs of deterioration similar to what
 the music industry has experienced.



The 'Gutter Cinema movement', as it's being called, is sweeping the world inspiring inexperienced filmmakers to pick up their cell phones and to create feature films on micro budgets. 



'Black Biscuit' was made for $800, and shot on mobile phones and childrens cameras, featuring a cast of homeless people, prostitutes, pimps, handicapped, and an ex child ping pong champion.



In an era when film stars make up to $50 Million per picture, this can be seen as a revelation to the death of the old fashioned movie star, and birth of the street superstar.



Federico's new Pink8 manifesto has set the template for the future of cinema.