
A still from festival opener “I Love Boosters.” Independent Film Festival Boston (IFFBoston) returns for its 23rd year this month with more than 90 screenings at some of Greater Boston’s most beloved independent venues: Somerville Theatre in Davis Square, Brattle Theatre in Harvard Square and Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline.
In addition to screenings, IF- FBoston will host Q&A sessions, panels and parties celebrating independent film.
The festival opens with “I Love Boosters,” directed by Boots Riley and starring Keke Palmer, Naomi Ackie, Taylour Paige, Poppy Liu, Eiza Gonzalez, LaKeith Stanfield, Will Poulter, Don Cheadle and Demi Moore. In the film, a group of professional shoplifters target a cutthroat fashion maven in a comedic take on a Robin Hood story.
Festival director Brian Tamm also recommends the documentary “Everybody to Kenmure Street,” a moving story
about a neighborhood in Scotland that comes together to prevent two
people from being taken by immigrant enforcement. Though set in the UK,
it’s a particularly timely and poignant storyline for the United States
as well.
“It’s nice to
have a doc that reminds you that we still have power to come together
and make change,” said Tamm. “I think it’s easy to lose hope. And seeing
this community come together to look after their neighbors was really
emotional and inspiring to me.”
One
of the hallmarks of the festival is the showcase where student films
are shown on the big screen at the Somerville Theatre followed by a
mixer to get student filmmakers out and about meeting each other. This
year IFFBoston will bring in additional organizations to connect
students with the larger filmmaking community in Boston. Tamm hopes
these efforts will show students that there are filmmaking opportunities
here and encourage them to stay in the city after graduation.
The festival lineup features a diverse mix of genres, artists and themes, which Tamm notes is intentional and essential.
“I
think it’s really important to find a place where we can hear other
voices,” he said. “There are a lot of underserved voices that aren’t
getting heard, and their stories are being told by other people with
political agendas. Finding ways for people to tell their own stories is
really important.”
IFFBoston
runs in venues across Greater Boston April 22 through April 29. In a
time of loneliness and division, Tamm says the very act of gathering to
see a film can be one of resistance.
“We’re
being encouraged to stay home and doomscroll, there’s a lot of money to
be made there,” said Tamm. “The fact of people instead coming together
and finding community, I think is a hopeful act.”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at iffboston.org