Skip to main content

Filmmaker Easmanie Michel To Screen Minutes To Say Hi At Haiti Film Fest

An interview with Easmanie Michel, the filmmaker behind Minutes to Say Hi.
The Haiti Film Fest, presented by New York-based arts organization Haiti Cultural Exchange, will launch today Thursday May 11 and will continue through May 14. Among the films being screened on May 12, is Minutes to Say Hi, a short. Filmmaker Easmanie Michel, the screenwriter-director behind the project, took some time out of her schedule to talk more about Minutes to Say Hi.

Kreyolicious: Minutes to Say Hi your latest project came about how?
Easmanie Michel: During my last semester at NYU, I took a filmmaking class where we had to write and direct a short film. I had been writing Minutes to Say Hi as a short story about the time period when I moved to the United States with my father and my younger sister in the eighties. I decided to adapt the short story into a script. The story is about an eleven-year-old girl who is approaching puberty without her mom who was left behind in Haiti. During that year where I was separated from my mother, our only form of communication was via a pay phone. At that time, long distance phone calls were quite expensive so we could only afford to talk to her for a short period of time.

I vividly remember the recorded operator’s voice that would periodically warn us that we were running out time by announcing how many minutes we had left. In Minutes to Say Hi, I tried to capture a significant moment in a young girl’s life of adjusting to a new culture and maturity without her mother.

Kreyolicious: What’s the best thing about being part of this festival?
Easmanie Michel: The best part of Haiti Film Fest is being introduced to the Haitian filmmakers who are creating works in Haiti. I remember the first time I attended Haiti Film Fest and how I was left with an overwhelming feeling of gratitude while watching the myriad of films about Haitians living in Haiti.

I applaud Haiti Cultural Exchange for their steadfast commitment to help Haitian filmmakers and films about Haiti reach not only the Haitian audience, but also the wider community.

It is easy for filmmaking to be regarded as a frivolous activity especially when there are so many pressing needs in the Haitian community. However, it is my belief that cinema – the moving image – has an extraordinary ability to be transcendental. It can reveal perspectives on Haitian lives the that may help dismantle the stereotypical images of Haitians that constantly saturates mainstream media.
An interview with Easmanie Michel, the filmmaker behind Minutes to Say Hi.
Kreyolicious: With technology changing faster your can say Minutes to Say Hi…what do you envision will happen to the film industry as a result?
Easmanie Michel: I recently attended an IFP “Meet the Decision Maker” workshop in Brooklyn where the attendees were given opportunities to speak to representative from a New York City film sales company. We were told that the company’s main initiative was specializing in director-driven work that would have a festival and theatrical run. This seemed to go against the ongoing message in the media that this strategy is being phased out. So even though digital platforms such as Netflix has become increasingly mainstream, this model will continue to exist.

Also, there seems to be a new twist to the movie viewing experience that will keep theatrical releases alive, especially with indie and experimental narratives. I recently watched a documentary at this place called Metrograph in the Lower East Side. It was a different experience than your usual movie going night since the place was comfortable and included a bookstore and a restaurant to boot. Similarly, a place in Williamsburg, Nitehawk Cinema, has the same setup. It would then seem that ambience is slowly become a key component in the indie film making structure thus making it more of an immersive experience.

As far as the business of film is concerned, I think that although filmmakers have the ability to reach a far wider audience than before with social media, etc…the amount of people creating content still makes it difficult to get independent films made without the help of larger companies, digital or otherwise who really only want to invest in films that can guarantee a profit. Of course, cultivating an audience, especially with complex or innovative stories with social media, now becomes a facet of the overall process and can be brought to the table.

I am an advocate for focus on auxiliary products. Not only can it help the filmmaker and other stakeholders make more of a profit on their film, but it also adds to the “experience” I just mentioned. Sometimes, undue attention to this part can contribute to the pitfall of lukewarm narratives, but in light of filmmakers having the power to do their own marketing, product placement and so on this opens up greater autonomy. This is all hard work in addition to the miracle of making a film. One has to weigh it out – the pros and cons, but more options are better than less.

An interview with Easmanie Michel, the filmmaker behind Minutes to Say Hi.

Minutes to Say Hi by filmmaker Easmanie Michel will screen May 12 Friday, at the | Five Myles Gallery 558 St. John’s Place, Brooklyn, NY 11238 | 6:00 to 9:00pm | CLICK HERE to Visit the Haiti Cultural Exchange website to learn more!

Movies, Easmanie, Fest, Film, Filmmaker, Haiti, Michel, Minutes, Screen

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

10 Questions With Singer-Songwriter Mikaelle Cartright

Mikaelle Cartright has a voice that’s like tropical silk. The New York-born, singer-songwriter has a jazzy style that recalls the styles of singers like Anita Baker with a little hint of Shirley Bassey. How did she develop her jazzy style? What role do her parents play in her support system as a singer-songwriter? Read on to find out. Kreyolicious: Your name is Mikaelle, no doubt stemming from the name Michael, which means Who Can Be Like God ? What is the most extraordinary thing that’s happened to your life that has had you saying the same phrase? Mikaelle Cartright: Correct, my name means “Who is like God”. My existence causes me to ask that constantly. My birth was a miracle. My mother almost lost me. She was placed on bed rest somewhere around the fourth month. The muscles of her uterus were giving out and the doctor said I was going to just fall out. The medication, some hormone treatment, was barely available and when Baby Doc fell, it was chaos. My mother was, thank God, ...

Haiti’s First Lady of Rap, and Hip Hop Kreyol?

Eunide Edouarin—the Haiti-based rapper more popularly known as Princess Eud —doesn’t like to do interviews. “When I’m being interviewed,” the raptress contends, “I have so many things going on my head at the same time that I sometimes answer questions they never asked me, and I’m kinda shy.” Yet shyness is a quality that very few would identity with Edouarin. Take a performance for example in which the self-described homebody held her own alongside CaRiMi , one of the most popular Haitian pop bands on the market, during one of her first big performances in New York. Slithering sexily onstage, the singer-rapper rapped effortlessly on the band’s hit “Fanm Nan Move”, before dissolving into a verse of her own song “Hey” . It’s utter confidence and bravado that shines through; no signs of timidity. Edouarin is a self-proclaimed traditional girl, but her start in the Haitian rap music game was far from conventional. While hanging at a local radio station in Port-au-Prince, she was invite...

Kreyolicious Interview: Mia Lopez, Publicist/Entrepreneur

Mia Lopez is the CEO and President of M.I.A. Media, Inc, a public relations firm based in Miami that caters to the Haitian entertainment industry. Lopez is a low-key person, but among her peers and industry insiders, her work doesn’t go unnoticed. Of her, Patrick Desvarieux, the founder of Kompa Magazine, said: “She is a natural. A people’s person. One of the best at what she does. A master of her craft.” Nick Jean of KalePwa.com calls her a pioneer. “She helped take the Haitian Community into modern times [in terms of her public relations work],” he contends. After being in the mainstream music industry, singer-songwriter Mickael Music wanted to enter the Haitian music market with her Bel Project, but wanted to go about it the right way. She recalls, “I asked around, ‘Who is the best PR marketing person in the Haitian music industry’? For the people that even knew what that meant all said, “Mia Lopez”, as if she [had] created the title in the Haitian music industry. When I say “ev...