Israel Film Center Festival Announces Full Line-Up, Special Events and Guests

The Israel Film Center Festival, presented by JCC Manhattan, announced special events and a detailed program for the 2015 edition of the festival, to take place in New York and Westchester from June 4-11. The festival features U.S. and New York premieres of the top recent films out of Israel's budding cinema industry.

Guests include renowned Israeli directors whose works will be presented at the festival, including Eran Riklis (Lemon Tree, The Syrian Bride) director of A Borrowed Identity and Shira Geffen (Jellyfish), director of the closing night film,Self Madeamong many other emerging voices in the burgeoning Israeli film scene. The festival will also present events with celebrated actors such as Alon Aboutboul (The Dark Knight Rises) who stars in Is That You? and Mili Avital (Stargate).  

The Israel Film Center Festival hosts a diverse array of films, talent and themes which will be embraced at JCC Manhattan’s signature post-film discussions. Post-film conversations include guests from the Berlin Film Festival favorite Youth, directed by Tom Shoval, about rebellious teenagers in Israel who decide to kidnap a local girl in order to overcome their family’s financial issues.  Other films with timely themes are the Cannes Film Festival favorites, The Kindergarten Teacher, directed by Nadav Lapid, about the disturbing relationship between a teacher and a child prodigy, as well as Next To Her directed by Asaf Korman, about a young woman taking care of a sister on the autistic spectrum.

Isaac Zablocki, Artistic Director of the festival, states, “All of the films in this year’s festival follow a new trend in Israeli cinema to relate to social issues in Israeli society, while finding levers to resonate with global audiences as well.”

The more traditional modern Israeli cinema themes of military and religion will also be presented from new perspectives and through a new light with films includingTuviansky, directed by Riki Shelach.
Tuviansky is a historical narrative feature film about an officer in the early days of the Israeli army who is the only other man apart from Adolf Eichmann to have been executed in Israel. This forgotten tale in Israel’s history evokes social questions on the misuse of power that are still very much alive today.

The Holocaust confronted from the point of view of young, third generation of Israelis who move back to Berlin in the film Anderswo  Anywhere Else, directed by Ester Amrami.  Apples From the Desert, directed by Matti Harari and Arik Lubetzki and based on Savyon Libbrecht’s celebrated eponymous novel, tells the story of a woman who leaves the orthodox community in Jerusalem for secular life on a kibbutz. And, in the bold documentary Sacred Sperm, director Ori Gruder deals with sex in the ultra orthodox community. 

Finally, the 2015 edition of the festival presents the first film on Israel’s emerging football league in Touchdown Israel, directed by Paul Hirchberger, which brings together diverse sectors of the population including Arabs, Jews, the religious and the secular. 

Special events include a roof top screening of the classic Sallah Shabati by Ephraim Kishon, in honor of the 50 year anniversary of the film’s release. Kishon’s son will present the film.

The complete line up of films is as follows:
 
A Borrowed Identity 
(Dir. Eran Riklis, 105 min)
Eyad, who grew up in an Arab town in Israel, is given the chance to go to a prestigious Jewish boarding school in Jerusalem. He tries desperately to fit in with his schoolmates and is isolated until Jewish classmate Naomi befriends him. Eyad's other lifeline is Yonatan (Michael Moshonov), whom Eyad is assigned to help with schoolwork. Both are misfits: one in a wheelchair, the other an Arab. Through love, friendship, tradition, and conflict, Eyad struggles to find his identity. Based on the books of Sayed Kashua.
 
Anderswo  Anywhere Else 
(Dir. Ester Amrami, 84 min)
In this amusing drama, Noa decides to fly back to Israel after nine years in Berlin, where she felt misunderstood and alone. Before long, old conflicts resurface and are joined by new ones in her old homeland. When her boyfriend Jörg shows up in Israel, her two carefully separated worlds collide as she tries to come to terms with herself and others.    
 
Apples from the Desert 
(Dir. Matti Harari, Arik Lubetzki, 87 min)
Based on the acclaimed novel by Savyon Liebrecht. Rebecca, the only daughter of ultra-Orthodox parents from Jerusalem, begins to secretly expose herself to the secular world. When her strict father decides to set her up to marry an older widower, she runs away from her family to a kibbutz in the desert with a young man.   

Is That You?
(Dir. Dani Menkin, 81 min)
After Ronnie (Alon Abutbul) is fired from his job at the age of 60, he sets off to America in search of his childhood love. His road trip through the ins and outs of multiple states turns into a life-changing journey.   
 
Kicking Out Shoshana 
(Dir. Shay Kanot, 100 min)
In this comedy starring Oshri Cohen and Gal Gadot, an Israeli soccer player, Ami Shoshan, is forced to pose as a gay man after being caught flirting with the girlfriend of an Israeli mobster. Shunned by his teammates and fans alike, Shoshan nevertheless finds himself a hero of the gay community in Jerusalem.
 
The Kindergarten Teacher 
(Dir. Nadav Lapid, 120 min)
A kindergarten teacher discovers a five-year-old child has a prodigious gift for poetry. Amazed and inspired by this young boy, her fascination becomes an obsession as she is determined to protect his primal talent before the passage from boyhood to adolescence changes his purity.   
 
Next to Her 
(Dir. Asaf Korman, 90 min)
Chelli is raising her sister Gabby (Dana Ivgy) who has developmental disabilities. When Chelli meets a man, her complicated life gets further tangled and her relationship with her sister begins to play a new role.  
 
Sacred Sperm 
(Dir. Ori Gruder, 60 min)
An eye-opening documentary exploring one of the biggest taboos in Orthodox Judaism. The ultra-Orthodox director candidly searches his community of parents and rabbis on how to educate their male children about sex and how to keep the commandments that call to abstain.  
 
Special Screening in honor of Ephraim Kishon: Sallah Shabati on the Roof!
In commemoration of 50 years since the release of Sallah Shabati and 10 years since the passing of Ephraim Kishon, join us for an outdoor screening of the Israeli classic starring Chaim Topol.
 
Touchdown Israel 
(Dir. Paul Hirschberger, 81 min)
America's favorite sport is spreading to Israel and bringing together a diverse cast of characters. Osraeli Jews, Muslims, Christians, Americans living in Israel and religious settlers all play together. The film explores the power of sports as a unifier in a complex, multifaceted society. 
 
Tuviansky 
(Dir. Riki Shelach, 82 min)
In 1948, six weeks after the state of Israel was established and amidst the chaos of the formation of a new military force, Captain Meyer Tuviansky was accused of treason. He was arrested, tried, sentenced and executed, only to be exonerated one year later. Based on a true story.
 
Youth Noar
(Dir. Tom Shoval, 107 min)
Two teenaged brothers share a strong, almost telepathic connection. They feel their family is falling apart due to a financial crisis. They decide to take action, and kidnap a young classmate in an effort to solve the family’s problems.
 
Self Made: Closing Night Film
(Dir. Shira Geffen, 89 min)
In this surrealistic drama, an Israeli artist and a Palestinian employee of a furniture company are both trapped within their respective worlds. When the artist finds her furniture is missing a screw, the two women’s worlds collide and they find themselves living the life of the other on the opposite side of the border. 
 
AUDIENCE SELECT
Vote for your favorite Israeli film that was released in the U.S. this year. The winning film will be announced on opening night and screened on Thursday, Jun 11 at 9pm.
 
Zero Motivation: Female Israeli soldiers are posted to a remote desert base and spend their time pushing paper until they can return to civilian life.
 
Gett: The Trial of Vivian Amsalem: An Israeli woman (Ronit Elkabetz) fights for three years to obtain a divorce from her devout husband, who refuses to grant his permission to dissolve the marriage.
 
The Farewell Party: Levana and Yehezkel, a married couple in a retirement home, love being together until a pair of devastating challenges suddenly threatens to divide them.

For more information, please visit: israelfilmcenter.org/festival

Brooklyn Film Festival Announces 18th Annual Festival Lineup

  • Kicks Off May 29 With Manson Family Vacation
  • Event To Feature 108 Films From 26 Countries

The Brooklyn Film Festival has announced their full slate of films for the 2015 edition of this Brooklyn cultural mainstay. For their 18th edition, the festival will open with the East Coast premiere of J. Davis’ Manson Family Vacation , starring Jay Duplass, Linas Phillips, Tobin Bell, Leonora Pitts, Adam Chernick and Davie-Blue, screening at new BFF venue the Wythe Hotel in Williamsburg. Executive produced by Jay & Mark Duplass, the film was acquired by Netflix at the 2015 SXSW Film Festival.

This year’s festival is comprised of 108 features and shorts from 26 countries spread over 5 continents and of these, 17 are world premieres and 30 US premieres, with Ryan Carmichael’s But Not For Me as the lone narrative feature world premiere. This New York City film stars Marcus Carl Franklin, Elena Urioste, Maria Vermeulen and Roger Guenveur Smith.

In addition to But Not For Me, BFF films with a NYC connection include Matthew Yeager’s US premiere Valedictorian, starring Brian Dell, Jennifer Prediger and Eleonore Hendricks; Onur Turkel’s Abby Singer/Songwriter , also starring Prediger, along with Turkel and Josephine Decker, Harvey Mitkas’ Devil Town, starring Lindsay Burdge, Alex Karpovsky, Lawrence Michael Levine, Jennifer Prediger (no, we’re not kidding), Sophia Takal, Brooke Bloom, Noah Gershman, Jen Kim, Alex Ross Perry and Caveh Zahedi; Alison Bagnall’s Funny Bunny , starring Kentucker Audley, Joslyn Jensen, Olly Alexander, Louis Cancelmi, Josephine Decker, Anna Margaret Hollyman, Grace Gonglewski, Caridad de la Luz and Nicholas Webber; Frank Hall Green’s Wildlike, starring Ella Purnell, Bruce Greenwood, Brian Geraghty, Teddy Kyle Smith, Nolan Gerard Funk, Ann Dowd, Diane Farr, Joshua Leonard, and Jack & Robert Schurman’s documentary Wild Home.

"The 2015 fest has a number of fantastic films from local filmmakers that shows the diverse creative visions of our city's filmmakers," says Director of Programming Bryce J. Renninger. "Work from across the country and the world round out the lineup, exploring and exemplifying this year's theme of Illuminate with their intelligence and ingenuity."

Expanding on the theme, BFF executive director Marco Ursino says “Illuminate is designed to showcase a new generation of filmmakers and their visions as part of the larger Brooklyn creative story,” adding “The festival hopes to spotlight storytelling without boundaries and welcome multi-layered stories, including the abstract and the inspirational, the intriguing and the ironic. The festival is simply looking for projects that reflect a creative, furious, explosive, and uncontainable intelligence.”

Other special events during the fest include the 11th annual KidsFilmFest 2015 on Saturday, May 30th at the Made in NY Media Center by IFP; the Filmmakers Party on  June 3rd at Billet & Bellows; the BFF Exchange series of panels and a pitch session on June 6th; “The Illuminate Party,” also on  June 6th, and the June 7th Awards Ceremony.

Main BFF venues are the Wythe Hotel and Windmill Studios in Greenpoint. Satellite locations include Nitehawk Cinema in Williamsburg, Made in New York Media Center By IFP in Dumbo, and BRIC House in Fort Greene.

The complete Feature lineup is as follows. Winners of the various festival awards as chosen by the fest juries and Board of Directors receive a total of $50,000 in prizes and film services from festival sponsors Panavision NY, Abelcine, Xeno Lights, Media Services, Film Friends, Mik Cribben Steady-Cam, Cinecall Soundtracks and Windmill Studios.

Opening Night

  • Manson Family Vacation Director: J. Davis - Two brothers (Jay Duplass and Linas Phillips) reunite when the more free-spirited brother shows up at the other's door with nothing but a backpack. Together, they get to know each other again while touring the sites of Charles Manson's exploits and exploring Manson's contemporary life. EAST COAST PREMIERE

Narrative Features

  • Abby Singer/Songwriter Director: Onur Tukel - Divorced stockbroker Jamie Block was once an indie-rock star. Going through a life crisis, he teams up with a filmmaker to make a series of music videos in this trippy, funny film. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • But Not for Me Director: Ryan Carmichael - Will is a young writer working at an ad agency as a copywriter. Like many others his age, he is hiding his true passion for philosophy and music and holding back his true thoughts, until a relationship with a young woman inspires him. WORLD PREMIERE
  • Devil Town Director: Harvey Mitkas - A young woman enlists a shady detective to help her find her missing sister in this neo-noir with a cast of indie film favorites.
  • Eadweard Director: Kyle Rideout - A psychological biopic that explores the mind of Eadweard Muybridge, the godfather of cinema, who was also the last American to receive a justifiable homicide verdict after killing his wife’s lover. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • Funny Bunny Director: Alison Bagnall - A young canvasser and a loner teenager who is estranged from his parents go on a journey to meet Ginger, the animal activist with whom the teen has developed an online relationship. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • God Bless the Child Directors: Robert Machoian and Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck - In this beautifully realized observational narrative, Harper, the oldest of five siblings, must take care of her siblings. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • Inferno Director: Vinko Moderndorfer - In this Slovenian realist drama, young working class family must deal with the struggles of unemployment while the global economy crumbles and local labor rebels. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • Sweaty Betty Directors: Joe Frank and Zachary Reed - Two stories come out of the row houses on the border of Washington, D.C. — a pig, Ms. Charlotte, is carted around, vying for a chance to be a team mascot for the Washington Redskins; and two teenage best friends come into ownership of a dog that they attempt to sell. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • Valedictorian Director: Matthew Yeager - Ben feels less and less in touch with his life in New York City, and over a year, he must confront the connections — or lack thereof — he feels with those he considers close. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE
  • Wildlike Director: Frank Hall Green - When teenage Mackenzie is sent to live with her uncle in Juneau, Alaska, she knows it’s not right for her. Shortly after arriving, she embarks on a journey headed south to find her mother.

Documentary Features

  • 20 Years of Madness Director: Jeremy Royce - The founder of a mid-90’s Public Access TV show in Detroit reunites the cast twenty years later to make a new episode and discovers that his friends and former collaborators are struggling with the hard realities of adulthood.
  • Chameleon Director: Ryan Mullins - The elusive undercover journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas is one of Ghana’s most popular figures. Though the charismatic investigator has named and shamed various high profile malfeasants, his identity remains hidden. U.S. PREMIERE
  • Deep Web Director: Alex Winter - Thirty-year-old entrepreneur Ross William Ulbricht has been convicted for operating the online black market Silk Road. This comprehensive documentary tracks the history of the site and the vigorously pursued case against Ulbricht.
  • Frame by Frame Directors: Alexandria Bombach and Mo Scarpelli - Photography was outlawed in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan; however, with the fall of the Taliban, photographers have been key documenters of the changing nation.
  • Help Us Find Sunil Tripathi Director: Neal Broffman - Four weeks after disappearing from his apartment as a student at Brown University, Sunil Tripathi was accused of being Suspect #2 in the Boston Marathon bombings. The false accusations disrupted his family, steadfastly working with his friends to find him.
  • I Am Thor Director: Ryan Wise - Jon Mikl Thor was a bodybuilder, steel gender, and rock star in the 70’s and 80’s who led the theatrical band THOR. Today, he seeks to reclaim his mantle as a high-energy rock star. EAST COAST PREMIERE
  • Paradiso Director: Omar A. Razzak - Projectionist Rafael works hard to tidy up and maintain Madrid’s last remaining adult movie theater, Duque de Alba. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE
  • Placebo Director: Abhay Kumar - One of the most competitive medical schools, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) has an acceptance rate of less than 0.1%. The high academic standards leave a harsh toll on the students. U.S. PREMIERE
  • We Were Rebels Directors: Katharina von Schroeder and Florian Schewe - Agel took up arms when he was ten to participate in the fight for an independent South Sudan. After leaving the conflict, Agel has returned to an independent South Sudan, where he is the captain of the national basketball team and worries over the young nation's fragile democracy.
  • Wild Home Directors: Jack Schurman and Robert Schurman - Deep in the woods of Maine, Bob Miner, a Vietnam Veteran rehabilitates abused and abandoned animals. He and his wife have built a kingdom for lions, tigers, hyenas, kangaroos, black bears, and over 200 other species of animals that attracts a diverse set of visitors.

For more information, please visit: www.brooklynfilmfestival.org.

THE 2015 HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH FILM FESTIVAL from June 11-21, 2015

Co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and IFC Center 
***
The Human Rights Watch Film Festival will be presented from June 11 to 21, 2015 with 16 films from across the globe that celebrate the power of individuals and communities to effect change, said Human Rights Watch. Now in its 26th edition, the festival is co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and IFC Center.

This year’s film festival is organized around three themes: Art Versus Oppression, Changemakers and Justice and Peace. The festival also features a series of special programs, including a discussion around the ethics of image-making in documenting human rights abuses, a master class on international crisis reporting and digital storytelling, and a multimedia project on the women activists of the Arab Spring.

“This year’s Human Rights Watch Film Festival is all about challenging the status quo,” said the festival’s creative director, John Biaggi. “From fighting government corruption in Guatemala, to fighting to bring back the female voice in Iran, to fighting against the stereotyping of young African-American men in the US, the films this year showcase both the need and determination of individuals to reform unjust social, cultural and political systems worldwide.”

The festival will begin on June 11 with a fundraising Benefit Night for Human Rights Watch featuring Matthew Heineman’s harrowing look into Mexico's drug war, Cartel Land. Winner of the US documentary directing and cinematography awards at the Sundance Film Festival, the film exposes two contemporary vigilante movements, one on either side of the US-Mexico border.

Director Marc Silver and special guests will be at the June 12 Opening Night screening of another Sundance award-winner, 3½ Minutes, Ten BulletsThis documentary centers on the 2012 shooting death of a black teenager, Jordan Davis, at a Florida gas station and the trial of his killer, Michael Dunn.

The Closing Night screening on June 21 will be the renowned documentarian Stanley Nelson’s The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, a history of the Black Panther Party in the US, featuring rare archival footage, from the Party’s beginnings to its ultimate dissolution. The director and some of the film’s subjects will be on hand for a discussion afterward.

Art Versus Oppression

The Iranian filmmaker Ayat Najafi's musical journey No Land’s Song follows his composer sister Sara’s attempts to organize a concert in Tehran despite restrictions prohibiting female solo singers from performing before a mixed audience. The festival is pleased to present Najafi with its 2015 Nestor Almendros Award for courage in filmmaking.

Winner of the Toronto Film Festival’s audience award for documentary, Hajooj Kuka’s Beats of the Antonov immerses viewers in the world of the Sudanese farmers, herders and rebels of the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountain regions, who defiantly continue to tend their lands and celebrate their musical heritage in the face of a government bombing campaign.

Filmed before, during and after the Arab Spring, Francois Verster’s kaleidoscopic The Dream of Shahrazad uses the metaphor of Shahrazad—the princess who saves her life by telling stories—to explore the ways in which creativity and politics coincide in response to oppression.

New York’s own The Yes Men team with the filmmaker Laura Nix for The Yes Men Are Revolting, which follows the activist-pranksters as they pull the rug out from under mega-corporations, government officials and the media in a series of stunts designed to draw awareness to climate change.


Changemakers

Joey Boink's intimate documentary Burden of Peace follows Claudia Paz y Paz, Guatemala's first female attorney general, as she prosecutes the former dictator Efraín Rios Montt for his role in the genocide of nearly 200,000 Mayan Guatemalans. 

Andreas Dalsgaard's Life Is Sacred reveals how the unorthodox presidential candidate Antanas Mockus and his enthusiastic young activist supporters attempt to reverse the vicious cycle of violence that is part of everyday life in Colombia.

Oscar-nominated filmmaker Gini Reticker’s The Trials of Spring, which will be shown in its world premiere, tells the stories of three Egyptian women who risk everything to fight for change in their country. This feature documentary anchors a larger multimedia project at the festival about women activists from the Middle East and North Africa.

Beth Murphy’s What Tomorrow Brings, which will be presented as a work-in-progress screening, chronicles a year in the life of the first all-girls school in a remote, conservative Afghan village. 

The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, the closing night film, is also featured in this theme.


Justice and Peace

Joshua Oppenheimer's multi-award-winning The Look of Silence, the companion piece to hisThe Act of Killing (HRWFF 2013), focuses on a village optometrist who confronts the men who murdered his brother during Indonesia's anti-communist purges of the 1960s.

The psychological toll of the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan is laid bare in Laurent Bécue-Renard’s Of Men and War, which looks at a group of combat veterans at a group therapy center as they struggle to overcome their Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and rebuild their lives.

Lyric R. Cabral and David Felix Sutcliffe’s (T)ERROR puts the filmmakers on the ground during an active FBI counterterrorism sting operation as they follow “Shariff,” a black revolutionary-turned-informant, in his attempt to befriend a suspected Taliban sympathizer and build a case against him.

The Israeli-born director Tamara Erde’s This Is My Land takes viewers inside six independently run schools in Israel and the occupied West Bank to investigate how history is taught in this contested region.

Through stop-motion animation, drawings and interviews, Amer Shomali and Paul Cowan’s The Wanted 18 recreates the true story of the Israeli army’s pursuit of 18 cows whose independent milk production on a Palestinian collective farm was declared “a threat to the national security of the state of Israel.”

The Benefit Night’s Cartel Land and Opening Night’s 3½ Minutes, Ten Bullets are also featured in this theme.


Special Programs

A Right to the Image 

By examining various bodies of work from the worlds of human rights filmmaking and photography, documentarian Pamela Yates, photographer Susan Meiselas and Charif Kiwan, co-founder of Abounaddara Collective, will explore the notion of “a right to the image” that protects the dignity of subjects, as well as the integrity of the journalists, image-makers and researchers who work in these situations.

The Trials of Spring: A Multimedia Initiative 
The Trials of Spring is an initiative that aims to elevate the stories of the women who were on the front lines of the uprisings that swept the Arab world in 2011. The project includes six short films profiling women from Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain, and Syria, a feature documentary focused on Egypt, and an outreach campaign that will bring these stories to stakeholders, educators and grassroots organizations around the world. This program will feature a selection of the short films and a discussion with the multi-disciplinary team. 

The Unravelling: Human Rights Reporting and Digital Storytelling
During this master class, the Human Rights Watch emergencies director, Peter Bouckaert, and leading photojournalist Marcus Bleasdale will focus on their multimedia project The Unravellingto show how Human Rights Watch used the techniques and strategies of international crisis reporting and digital storytelling to reveal the little-known humanitarian crisis in the Central African Republic. Bleasdale was awarded the Robert Capa Gold Medal by the Associated Press in 2015 for his work for Human Rights Watch in the Central African Republic.

In conjunction with this year’s film program, the festival will present Turkana, an exhibition by the photographer Brent Stirton that documents the challenges that the Turkana people of Kenya face in accessing their rights to water, health and livelihood. It will be featured in the Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery at the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater for the duration of the festival.

TICKET INFORMATION: Tickets are available online at filmlinc.com for the screenings at the Film Society of Lincoln Center and ifccenter.com for the IFC Center, as well as directly from each of the organization’s box offices. Film Society of Lincoln Center: $14.00 General Public, $11.00 Seniors & Students, $9.00 FSLC Members. IFC Center: $14.00 General Public, $10.00 Seniors & Children, $9.00 IFC Center Members. A discount package is also available for screenings at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.

Ticket On Sale Dates: May 19 – Pre-sale to Film Society of Lincoln Center and IFC Center Members; May 21 – General Public. For discounted tickets and festival updates, sign up for the mailing list at www.hrw.org/filmconnect. Follow the festival on Twitter @hrwfilmfestival.

 For Complete Program and Schedule Information: ff.hrw.org

For more information, call the Film Society at 212-875-5600 or IFC Center at 212-924-7771 or visit ff.hrw.org.

Legally Desi: Miss India America

FINALLY- the film Indian-Americans have been waiting for!  This outright hilarious comedy will have you laughing from beginning to end.  It follows Lily a shameless, but brilliant teenager who is competitively driven to achieve her meticulously calculated plans with a complete lack of empathy, for others.  So far her plans are working perfectly; valedictorian of her class, accepted into Harvard, a loving family, and not to mention a cute boyfriend who's going to be an engineer, or so she thought. Turns out her boyfriend didn't like her plans, or ever wanted to become a petroleum  engineer, or her OCD-like controlling behavior very much, so he ran off with the reigning Miss India America. Stunned and Infuriated Lily can't believe it; she's never lost at anything, there has to be some kind of mistake with the world not her. So, she decides she's going to win the Miss India America beauty pageant to get her boyfriend back, not try, but WIN. Hilarity ensues, and lessons are learned as Lily sees what her selfishness is doing to others.

For more details, visit: http://www.missindiaamericapictures.com/