
A still from “Privilege Pack (The Movie)” directed by Kat Otuechere. Festival includes screenings, hangouts, panel discussions and script readings
Every year since its founding in 1999, what’s now known as the Roxbury International Film Festival has brought underrepresented stories to silver screens in Boston.
Established to support local filmmakers who were snubbed from other festivals, RIFF has evolved into the largest festival in New England by and for people of color. Screening films from across the globe, RIFF allows audience members “to see more of themselves reflected in mainstream media,” said Lisa Simmons, the festival’s artistic and executive director and founding member.
“We see ourselves as a filmmakers’ festival,” she said, which means supporting the filmmakers and their storytelling, providing networking opportunities and hosting regular filmmaker events.
This year, RIFF will run in person from June 20 to 28 and online from June 27 to July 2, and will feature filmmaker hangouts, panels, workshops and daily script-reads. On screen, audience members will witness stories about Boston Public Schools students, a grieving father and daughter duo, real-life African American legends and more.
“The fact that the festival focuses on untold stories … it carves out a space that’s really important in general in the world, [and] in Boston that has this terrible history of racism and segregation, and creates a platform for people of color to speak out and elevate their lives in words,” said Mindy Fried, a sociologist and the director of Hoopla Productions.
Fried is one of the creators of the documentary short, “Open Your Heart: Immigrant Stories from Boston and Beyond,” which screens on June 23 during the festival’s local filmmakers slot, with free admission to all. The film, directed by Jesse Epstein, follows a group of young people working to translate the lived experiences of seven immigrant activists into a staged production.
The 2024 festival will be Boston native Kat Otuechere’s directorial and executive-producer debut when her film, “Privilege Pack
(The Movie)” screens after Fried’s. The fictionalized short is a visual
album based on the soundtrack of the same name by artist Ant Thomas,
and chronicles a young Thomas’ life growing up Black in the South End.
“As
I embarked on my filmmaking journey, years ago, I had no cool spaces
like this [where] such opportunity and support existed right here in my
hometown,” Otuechere said. “I’m just looking forward to connecting with
more folks that share the passion for film and also across mediums.”
When
selecting the lineup, Simmons said, RIFF simply looks for good
storytelling. She found that in this year’s opening night selection,
“Luther: Never Too Much,” which she said she’s particularly excited
about. Directed by award-winning filmmaker Dawn Porter, the documentary
weaves together archival footage and retrospective interviews to tell
the story of music legend Luther Vandross.
Closing
out RIFF will be festival favorite “Sing Sing,” a heartwarming
fictionalized film about a real-life group of inmates at the New York
prison who form a theater troupe, led by a character played by actor
Colman Domingo.
Beyond
entertainment, Simmons wants the film festival to be a space where
audience members can be enlightened about different cultures and people,
to leave feeling like they know more than they did before they entered
the screening room.
“I
want them … to learn something new about a particular person,
particular story that they had never even heard about before or known
about before,” she said. “I love when audiences come out of a screening
and say, ‘Oh, my goodness, I had no idea … that that was happening in
that particular time in that particular place in the world.’”
ON THE WEB
See the full festival schedule at roxfilmfest.com/2024festival