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The National Film Festival for Talented Youth

Published 7:00 am Friday, May 4, 2012

The National Film Festival for Talented Youth

Though it draws entries from all over the U.S. and abroad, The National Film Festival for Talented Youth (aka NFFTY) is actually a local organization, co-founded in 2007 by Jesse Harris—then a 21-year-old filmmaker himself. Thanks to hustle and good connections, he’s since expanded it to a four-day affair featuring a companion Future of Film Expo (over at the Seattle Center Exhibition Hall) beyond the 200-plus shorts being screened. (The age cutoff for directors is 22.) Whether owing to YouTube, affordable HD video cameras, or both, there seems to be an unlimited and ever-expanding supply of filmed content being produced in the world. Limited to boutique indies and Hollywood blockbuster, the traditional movie exhibition business can’t keep pace, so NFFTY serves a useful role for tyro directors—some as young as age seven! Among tonight’s titles, we like Shuffleboard Kings from Vancouver, BC college student Chris Aitken. The gentle, 16-minute comedy pays cute homage to the training montages of Rocky and The Karate Kid as a 73-year-old widower prepares for a critical game of tabletop shuffleboard. And a telling Canadian detail: Into his veggie shake, a teammate helpfully adds some extra protein in the form of—what else?—bacon. (Continues Fri.-Sun. at SIFF Cinema at the Uptown.) BRIAN MILLER

Thu., April 26, 7:30 p.m.; April 27-29, 2012