Alternative Histories and Psycho Black Cats

Exciting news! I am introducing a new element to our chashama viewing experience: the perspective of the filmmaker. While my commentaries and interpretations remain the central driving force behind the blog, the opportunity to learn the filmmaker’s intentions will enhance our understanding of the film’s purpose and provide background to the creative process. Today, I’m looking at the historically educational documentary “Virtual JFK” and the disturbingly comedic “Le Chat Noir.”


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Koji Masutani’s “Virtual JFK” provides a new angle on history in a look back to John F. Kennedy’s presidency: the “what if” angle. The film stimulates an onslaught of alternative possibilities to widely held historical interpretations. It’s a smart documentary that could be used as a supplemental learning tool for educational purposes, with the potential to encourage and excite discussions in and outside the classroom. Masutani hopes the audience will “consider the possibility that a devastating war in Vietnam could have been avoided had Kennedy not died in 1963 and had been re-elected in 1964.”


“Virtual JFK” is Koji Masutani’s first non-student film. It took him three years to gather never-before-seen footage and never-before-heard audio from the Kennedy administration. His documentary will get history buffs all tingly and eager to speculate over “what if.”

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Tristan Convert’s “Le chat noir” is a lot of fun to watch. It has an Edgar Allan Poe-meets-Twilight Zone edge to it. It is filmed well and incorporates various shots that entices the audiences to voyeuristic activities. The lack of a dialogue is not unnerving since it’s not needed to convey the plot. Not to mention the music soundtrack. The Savage Resurrection’s psychedelic rhythms and lyrics add to the film’s heightened tension. The best part, though, is the actor. He’s hilarious with his obsession with his toy train set, a psycho and annoying black cat. This film will remind people why a dog is a man’s best friend and how it is bad luck for a black cat to cross your path.


Convert explains the genius—and perhaps madness—behind the creation of his film, “Le Chat Noir:” it was his first time experimenting with a “dysnarrative story based on images, feelings and ambiance, in a thriller/funny/horror genre.” His style involves jumpy continuums and psychologically induced horror. He wants it to be an interactive movie where the audience “feels more than just sitting in the front of a show.”

Shanece’s Compass

Hello World!


Some people call me unconventional. Others say I’m creative, quirky. But everyone can agree that I’m obsessed with the art of filmmaking. Filmmaking is a visual expression of emotions and states of being. It’s a beautiful thing to stay in (or go out, whichever you prefer) watch a movie that speaks to you and complements your mood of the moment. Or a movie that inspires you to act, or stimulates you intellectually. A movie can do all that for you.


I enjoy watching movies of all kinds: comedies (oh, Seth Rogen), horror movies (the more blood-curdling the scream, the better), and, of course, action-packed thrillers (car chases are kind of a big deal). But the ones that I find most fulfilling are the movies that have a message and serve as a platform to help educate and motivate change. The movies that are meant to bring the international community together and foster an educational relationship. The movies that will open our eyes about one another’s cultures and make us more aware of other ideologies of the world.


Sound familiar? I am referring to the provocative, thought-provoking films submitted to the chashama Film Festival. And I hope you readers are as excited as I am to see what these filmmakers have to offer. Leading up to and throughout the festival, I’ll be bringing you a weekly dose of commentaries and interpretations of the featured films. No spoilers, regurgitations of detailed plot summaries, or verbose posts that make it pointless to watch the movie in the first place. Instead, look to me as a guide to your viewing experience. I am here to help you get more out of the chashama Film Festival.


Welcome to the chashama experience.