New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu


3 Amazing short documentaries screen at the Fall 2024 New Jersey Film Festival!


By Anita LaBelle

originally published: 09/03/2024



Legacy, and who gets to tell what stories, is a question that has long been asked by historians, anthropologists, and most importantly, artists. Three artists address this question head-on through their various films screening at the Fall 2024 New Jersey Film Festival: Rough Blazing Star (by Christopher Wiersema), Joey Skaggs: Stop BioPEEP (by Judy Drosd & Joey Skaggs), and WHAT IS HAPPENING? ART IN THE LIFE OF GERTIE 
FROELICH (by Marieli Frohlich).

Joey Skaggs: Stop BioPEEP is the tenth installment of the oral history series Joey Skaggs Satire and Art Activism, 1960s to the Present and Beyond, a film episodic that the New Jersey Film Festival has shown every episode of. Giuseppe Scaggoli, or as he is better known, Joey Skaggs has used artistic mediums and prank behavior to push pivotal societal issues into questioning. Through news clips, old prank footage, and modern interview excerpts conducted by Joey Skaggs and Judy Drosd, each episodic endeavor is thoroughly documented and hilariously explained. Skaggs’ work, though often gaining controversy at first, seems to always later reach critical acclaim due to retrospect and perhaps his own air of anthropological foresight. In this latest episode, Skaggs targets the still-topical issues of genetic mutation and government intervention, except this time, his audience goes global. Unfolding in 1998 when Joseph Howard (Joey Skaggs) plays the role of a corporate whistleblower, he foils BioPEEP’s 1997 corporate project to genetically alter and addict humans to chosen products, thus creating “consumer junkies” and targeted “gene-ocide”. When the information is leaked to the press via Skaggs, protests against BioPEEP occur in both the U.S. and Australia. Even more unexpected, was the mass alarm that the whole affair caused in Slovenia. Whether international conspiracy or guerilla artwork, audiences will be shocked by the inner workings and affairs of the piece, including the reach one story can take, and the media’s lust to grab any sensational story rather than the hard-hitting truth.

Christopher Wiersema’s experimental documentary film Rough Blazing Star approaches small-town history and local importance with a respectful, powerful, and poetic lens. Situated in Barre, Vermont at the Old Labor Hall, this spot was once the epicenter for the community of Italian anarchists and socialists in the early 1900s. By interviewing stone carver Guiliano Cecchinelli, and the 105-year-old Alba Rossi - both Italians and longtime residents of Barre, the piece is embedded with a gliding sense of remembrance, anarchism, floral fondness, and Emma Goldman’s writing. These elements add a sense of humanity to the film that is the key reason for its shining quality, with the humanity acting as a beating heart pumping blood through the veins of the film. While on the surface, the film is about a quaint setting in Vermont with a lively past, the inner soul of Rough Blazing Star delves into the cornerstones of life. It acts less like a film, and more like a collage, working to carefully craft an atmosphere that is wistful and poignant. The freeform of the film, rather than a narrative passageway, allows each audience member to take something specific to them from the film, fostering an experience that is truly unique.




Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info



WHAT IS HAPPENING? ART IN THE LIFE OF GERTIE FRÖHLICH is directed by Gertie’s own daughter, Marieli Fröhlich. Marieli began the project of documenting her mother’s life and artistic impact in 2018, but sadly Covid and the passing of Gertie brought the filming to a stop in 2020. Yet Marieli continued on, making sure that her mother’s work, which had often been overshadowed and kept obscured by the male-dominated art world and sexist system in general, would be carefully and lovingly chronicled. Via interview segments of Fröhlich’s compatriots in the Vienna (and global) art scene and thanks to the dedication of her daughter, Fröhlich’s achievements, advocacy, and own artwork can now be not only seen, but respected for their importance. Playing a key role in supporting other artists, curating the Galerie Sankt Stephan, and being a staunch example of the strength of female creativity (often in a world that does not respect it), there is little doubt of Fröhlich’s significance. The legacy of Gertie Fröhlich comes to light and lives on thanks to the work of Marieli Fröhlich, who also co-curated the first retrospective of Gertie Fröhlich’s artwork that showed at the Museum of the Applied Arts in Vienna, during 2023. Viewers will be transfixed by the charm of Fröhlich, and leave amazed at how her achievements went unknown for so long.

Each of these films come at their subjects from various perspectives and places around the world, yet their similarities speak to their artistic power. All films use archival footage and interviews as a way to honor the past, but beyond that, cement it into the framework of modern day. It shows to the audience how these legacies and memories are still immensely relevant, especially as we continue into the future. The interviews also allow a humanistic snapshot of the key players in each of the films, adding personality and compassion to the shorts. Whether it be Joey Skaggs, Gertie Froelich, Guiliano Cecchinelli, or Alba Rossi, all of them are revolutionaries in their own right - pranksters, feminists, anarchists - they are all movers and shakers in their own communities and beyond.

Rough Blazing Star screens at the Fall 2024 New Jersey Film Festival on Sunday, September 8 at 5 PM. Rough Blazing Star Director Christopher Wiersema will be present at the in-person screening to do a Q+A with the audience after the screening.  Joey Skaggs: Stop BioPEEP and WHAT IS HAPPENING? ART IN THE LIFE OF GERTIE FROELICH screen at the Fall 2024 New Jersey Film Festival on Friday, September 20 at 7 PM. WHAT IS HAPPENING? Director Marieli Fröhlich will be present at the in-person screening to do a Q+A with the audience after the screening.  All films will be available Online for 24 Hours on their show dates and In-Person at Voorhees Hall #105/Rutgers University, 71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ. Tickets are available for purchase here.




Advertise with NJ Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info


FEATURED EVENTS

To narrow results by date range, categories,
or region of New Jersey
click here for our advanced search.


New

New Jersey Film Festival: IT’S A to Z: The ART OF ARLEEN SCHLOSS & Demi-Demons

Friday, January 31, 2025 @ 7:00pm
NJ Film Festival
71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: film

Click here for full event listing

 

New

New Jersey Film Festival: The Accidental Spy

Saturday, February 01, 2025 @ 5:00pm
NJ Film Festival
71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: film

Click here for full event listing

 

New

New Jersey Film Festival: Shorts Program #2 - The Hollowing, Brooklyn, Disoriented, Phantom Limb, Help Yourself, Dinner at Manny’s

Saturday, February 01, 2025 @ 7:00pm
NJ Film Festival
71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: film

Click here for full event listing

 

New

New Jersey Film Festival: No Somos Maquinas: We Are Not Machines

Sunday, February 02, 2025 @ 5:00pm
NJ Film Festival
71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: film

Click here for full event listing

 

New

New Jersey Film Festival: God Teeth & The Traumatist

Friday, February 07, 2025 @ 7:00pm
NJ Film Festival
71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: film


Click here for full event listing

 

More events

Event Listings are available for $10 and included with our banner ad packages






Advertise with New Jersey Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info




 

EVENT PREVIEWS

Amazing

Amazing Feature God Teeth screens at the New Jersey Film Festival on February 7!

For many, the process of finding footage online and crafting a well-thought-out plot and connection between these shots may seem incredibly daunting and time-consuming. For musician and filmmaker Robbie C. Williamson, it is an exciting opportunity to craft something extremely unique and intriguing. Williamson’s found footage film God Teeth represents this excitement and exemplifies the exceptional results of his long-term efforts and passion for storytelling.



Immersive

Immersive The Hollowing screens at the 2025 New Jersey Film Festival on February 1st!

The Hollowing, directed by Steven Weinzierl, follows a couple as they try an experimental therapy to test the compatibility of their relationship. They are placed into a sleep state and are put into a false reality together. This dream-like version of their life showcases the mundane, everyday scenarios of a relationship to the more supernatural and grotesque elements that are unearthed by this therapy. It starts off with relatable feelings of relationship trouble while introducing and building up who the characters are and their relationship to each other, before taking dramatic turns and heightening the stakes of the relationship between the two as the therapy procedure continues. The film plays with the line between reality and dream in a way that is both noticeable and unnoticeable, creating a sense of suspense that is only heightened by the events unfolding onscreen. The film also showcases stellar cinematography and lighting that make the false reality just as immersive for the audience as it is for the characters.



Emotive

Emotive short Phantom Limb plays at the New Jersey Film Festival on February 1!

Alice Jokela’s Phantom Limb is an experimental short film that immerses the audience in the emotional journey of navigating trauma and the search for autonomy. The short film centers on Violetta (Shay Yu), a young woman who lost her right arm in an electrical shock accident while tagging in an underground railroad with her boyfriend. With her body forever altered, Vi wrestles to build a sense of identity while coping with the emotional impact of her trauma. In an interview with The New Jersey Film Festival, Jokela expressed her intention to create a film focused on female rage and the overt trauma that often goes overlooked or misunderstood because of the internal, invisible nature of pain. This is reflected in the short film, as those around Vi misperceive her emotional scars. Vi’s story emphasizes how internal trauma can be complex for others to recognize, especially when it’s not immediately visible.



Two

Two riveting shorts The Hollowing and Brooklyn screen at the New Jersey Film Festival on February 1!

How a filmmaker utilizes certain filmmaking techniques holds the power to change the film in immeasurable ways. Achieving the best look and flow of the film requires evaluating things such as lighting, color, and composition and determining how they can be applied. The outcome of these evaluations is a carefully articulated and well-done film that crafts an interesting narrative told not just through storytelling but through every part of the film. Two examples of this are The Hollowing, by Steve Weinzierl, and Brooklyn, by Timur Guseynov, both films that tell their stories well through various cinematography and filmmaking language techniques such as color, lighting, and frame composition.



It’s

It’s A to Z: The Art of Arleen Schloss New Jersey Film Festival Filmmaker Video Interview

Al Nigrin, Executive Director and Curator of the New Jersey Film Festival, sits down with Stuart Ginsberg, Director of It's A to Z: The Art of Arleen Schloss, for a filmmaker video interview at EBTV.