Documentary, Films, Women Directors

Chicken & Egg Pictures Helped Fund 23 Documentaries by Women Directors This Year

Chicken & Egg Pictures, the “only nonprofit film fund devoted solely to supporting women documentary directors,” announced last week that it would help support 23 nonfiction features this year.

In a press release, Executive Director Jenni Wolfson said, “Chicken & Egg Pictures is at a pivotal moment in its eight year history. There is a growing recognition, domestically and internationally, that women non-fiction filmmakers have a critical role to play turning the struggles of our time into resonant, urgent and provocative stories that will inspire critical discussion, civic engagement and social change. I have no doubt, that the artists we are supporting in this round will do just that.”

Among the awardees are Dawn Porter (Gideon’s Army) and Lucy Walker (Waste Land).

Scroll down for a full list of the grantees and descriptions of their projects.

NEW GRANTEES

BEAUTIFUL SIN (Completion)

Director: Gabriela Quiros

What if you desperately wanted to have a child, but your government and religion prohibited you from using the one medical treatment that could help you? Beautiful Sin explores the globalization of anti-abortion politics through the decade-long story of three infertile couples who take the Costa Rican government before an international human rights court to demand the right to use in vitro fertilization (IVF). Costa Rica is the only country in the world that has outlawed the fertility treatment, in which doctors create embryos in the lab.

THE BABUSHKAS OF CHERNOBYL (Post Production)

Directors: Holly Morris and Anne Bogart

As Fukushima smolders, the story of an extraordinary group of defiant old women rises from the ashes of Chernobyl to inform the nuclear debate. In the radioactive Dead Zone surrounding Chernobyl’s Reactor №4, some 200 “babushkas” cling to their ancestral homeland. Why they chose to return to their ancestral lands, defying the authorities and endangering their health, is a remarkable tale — about the pull of home, the power of shaping one’s destiny and the subjective nature of risk.

BRICK (Production)

Directors: Jessica Dimmock and Christopher LaMarca

BRICK witnesses the loss and extraordinary risk involved as five fathers and grandfathers find space to live as transgendered women in the hyper-masculine culture of the Pacific Northwest.

COCAINE PRISON (Post Production)

Directors: Violeta Ayala

From inside one of Bolivia’s most notorious prisons a cocaine worker, a drug mule, and his younger sister reveal the country’s relationship with cocaine. Cocaine Prison bridges the ever-widening gap between the North and the South and brings a new perspective to the War on Drugs as it is waged in the Andes.

THE DREAMCATCHERS (Production)

Director: Kim Longinotto

The Dreamcatchers follows two ex-prostitutes, Brenda Meyers-Powell and Stephanie Daniels-Wilson, as they work tirelessly to help young girls in the south side of Chicago stand up to pimps who try to recruit them with promises of love and easy money.

DRIVING WITH SELVI (Post Production)

Director: Elisa Paloschi

Driving with Selvi follows the nine year journey of a young woman who defies strict patriarchal traditions when she escapes an abusive child marriage to become South India’s first female taxi driver.

THE HAND THAT FEEDS (Post Production)

Directors: Rachel Lears and Robin Blotnick

Shy sandwich-maker Mahoma Lopez and his undocumented immigrant coworkers set out to end abusive conditions at a New York restaurant chain owned by powerful investors. The epic power struggle that ensues turns a single city block into a battlefield in America’s new wage wars.

THE HOMESTRETCH (Post Production)

Directors: Anne de Mare and Kirsten Kelly

Three homeless teenagers brave Chicago winters, the pressures of high school, and life alone on the streets to build a brighter future. Against all odds, these kids defy stereotypes as they create new, surprising definitions of home, but can they recover from the traumas of abandonment and homelessness and build the future they dream of?

THE LION’S MOUTH OPENS (Completion)

Director: Lucy Walker

A stunningly courageous young woman takes the boldest step imaginable, supported by her mother and loving friends.

MUDFLOW (Development)

Director: Cynthia Wade

Mudflow is the story of a giant, spewing, hot toxic mudflow in Indonesia, believed to be caused by poorly executed natural gas drilling. This eruption is one of the largest man-made disasters of recent times, yet relatively unknown beyond Indonesia. The mud volcano has been erupting violently for more than seven years, swallowing schools, villages and factories. It has permanently displaced 35,000 people and international scientists believe the mudflow will continue for another 20 years.

THE RETURN (Production)

Directors: Kelly Duane de la Vega & Katie Galloway

In 2012 California voters made history by passing a law shortening sentences of the currently incarcerated and, overnight, making thousands of “lifers” eligible for release. The Return weaves the stories of those at the epicenter of this unprecedented policy change: prisoners suddenly freed, families turned upside down, attorneys and judges wrestling with an untested law and reentry providers negotiating unfathomable transitions as they embark on what some hope is a harbinger of a national turn away from mass incarceration.

SONITA MEANS A TRAVELLING SWALLOW (Production)

Director: Rokhsareh Ghaemmaghami

Sonita is an 18 year-old, undocumented female Afghan immigrant who lives in Iran. She has formed a rap group with friends as an outlet for their problems, when her family plans to marry her off for 6000 USD.

SOUTHWEST OF SALEM: THE STORY OF THE SAN ANTONIO FOUR (Production)

Director: Deborah S. Esquenazi

Southwest of Salem: The Story of the San Antonio Four documents the painful reality of how homophobia, “junk science,” and the Satanic ritual abuse panic of the late 1980s and early 1990s created a frenzy of pressure to punish four innocent gay women. Three of these women were sentenced to 15 years in prison while the fourth woman was convicted to 37 years behind bars. The film also explores the long, tedious, yet dramatic process required in Texas to exonerate falsely convicted innocents.

TRAPPED (Development)

Director: Dawn Porter

Trapped follows the impact of Alabama’s new legislation requiring abortion providers to comply with unnecessary restrictions that may well force them to close down. Native Alabama resident June Ayers has operated an abortion clinic in Alabama for 35 years but now no physicians in the state will perform the procedure. Native Alabama physician Willie Parker lives in Chicago but agreed to fly to Alabama twice a month to perform abortions. Together with the nurses who run the clinic they are fighting to keep the right to choose for the women of Montgomery.

VESSEL (Post Production)

Director: Diana Whitten

There is a captain who sails her ship through loopholes in international law, providing abortions at sea for women with no other safe option. Her actions shock the church, infuriate governments, exhilarate the media, and provoke mass debate on shore, but they break no law; instead, she claims to save lives. Vessel is her story.

YULA’S DREAM (Post Production)

Director: Hanna Polak

Yula’s Dream is an extraordinary, thirteen-year personal journey about one of the bleakest urban places in the world: a “svalka” outside of Moscow. The largest garbage dump in Europe is where our story takes place. People struggle to live here, including eleven-year-old Yula, our protagonist, who we follow until she is twenty-five. During her adolescence she loses her father, falls in love, gets pregnant, and gives her child up for adoption. Finally one day she breaks out and leaves the garbage dump behind.

Prior Chicken & Egg Pictures Grantees Receiving Additional Funding

A QUIET INQUISITION (Post Production)

Directors: Holen Sabrina Kahn & Alessandra Zeka

At a public hospital in Nicaragua, OBGYN Dr. Carla Cerrato must choose between following a law that bans all abortions and endangers her patients, or take the risk, and provide the care she knows can save a woman’s life. As Carla and her colleagues navigate this dangerous dilemma, the impact of this law emerges, illuminating the tangible reality of prohibition against the backdrop of a political, religious and historically complex national identity.

AMONG THE BELIEVERS (Production)

Directors: Hemal Trivedi and Mohammed Naqvi

Maulana Abdul Aziz, the cleric of Pakistan’s most fundamentalist Islamic Seminary, declares a holy war against the government in hopes of establishing an Islamic utopia. The government retaliates by destroying his seminary and killing hundreds of his students. Among the Believers follows his personal quest, while charting the coming-of-age stories of two of his students whose futures are caught up in Aziz’s ideological war.

THE BILL (Production)

Director: Ramona Diaz

A political firestorm hits the Philippines when a proposed reproductive health law pits tradition against reform, bringing the culture war into the streets and churches. The stage is set for a showdown between timeless antagonists: those who resist change and those who embrace it. While the bill’s defeat or passage holds profound implications for this Catholic country, the twelfth most populous in the world, the spectacle also illuminates the universal drama inherent in change.

THE BLIND CINEMA CLUB (Post Production)

Director: Jennifer Redfearn & Tim Metzger

In the heart of Havana, an enigmatic city infused with vibrant art, world-class music, and vivid displays of faith, we find an unusual story depicting the fiery Cuban spirit. Every month, scores of blind and visually impaired people — revolutionary elders, bold musicians, and curious children — meet to watch Cuban films accompanied by detailed audio descriptions. Among the filmgoers are Milly and Lis, two young women coming of age during a time of change in Cuba. Over the course of three years, the film follows their dramatic personal stories as well as the growth of this unique cinema club.

IN THE MIDDLE (Production)

Director: Lorena Luciano

Risking their lives by crossing the unforgiving waters of the Mediterranean Sea dividing Italy from Africa, two Arab families reach the Italian shores. One of them is shattered by a deadly shipwreck in the same waters they’d hoped would rescript their lives. The other is transferred to a small impoverished town where the local Mayor is caught in between the mounting frustration of the refugees and a largely inert central government. In the Middle portrays the collision between two worlds unfolding in a remote Italian island, epicenter of a struggling economy that has little to offer to the newcomers.

LAND OF OPPORTUNITY (Interactive Transmedia Platform)

Director: Luisa Dantas

Rooted in post-Katrina New Orleans, Land of Opportunity is an ongoing exploration of the often contentious process of community redevelopment in the face of crisis/disaster. Through perspectives that travel across media, including a film and new experimental interactive web platform, the project explores the fundamental question: What kinds of communities do we want to (re)build in the 21st century? From New Orleans to New York, from Katrina to Sandy, we, along with partners in sister cities, create and curate multifaceted stories highlighting a diversity of voices and approaches designed to foster engagement and inspire action around the core issues happening to cities and towns near us all.

TOUGH LOVE (Post Production)

Director: Stephanie Wang-Breal

Tough Love explores our nation’s child welfare system from the perspective of parents who want to prove to the courts and the system that they deserve a second chance to be a parent and have a family.

[h/t Indiewire]

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