Saturday, October 19

Part 4: 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Featuring Bay Area Shorts, including Q&A with filmmakers RJ Siu, Mia J. Chong, Chad Panday, Shankey Srinvasan, Lisa Yadao, Brady Anderson, Joseph Alvarico

BAY AREA SHORTS:
7 film shorts

We are excited to present to you these short films from our local Bay Area filmmakers, and some selected favorites.

THE FILMS

  • Seoul Switch

    When an insecure, Korean American boy meets an International K-Pop Star who looks just like him, they decide to switch identities.

  • KOI

    KOI follows the misadventures of four Asian American roommates (RJ, David, Jihoon, Will) in their mid-twenties learning to work hard and play harder.  In this pilot, the gang gets into a predicament on the day of Will’s birthday bash, and through a series of twists, turns, spilt boba, and a near death experience, the boys’ lives are forever changed as they each learn something new about themselves and grow up… just a little.

  • Sonder

    In a brilliant white void, “Sonder” explores the multifaceted lives of passersby through individual and collective expression. “Sonder” references the sensation of realizing every person you encounter is living a life as complex and vivid as your own. Through abstract swirls of interlocking gestures and fluid athleticism, the dancers explore moments of epiphany and exchange. Directed by RJ Muna, choreographed by Mia J. Chong, and produced by EIGHT/MOVES.

  • Sammy's Final Arrangement

    After more than a decade with his own business and a firstborn child, Samuel Go must now come to terms with the stresses and the dwindling creative freedom that have resulted in his decision to end his practice and begin a new life. As Sammy directs his own cycle of self preservation, he must navigate the final stages of packing the remnants of his studio, a 2nd child with his wife, and the stresses of a final large scale wedding. Throughout his journey, Sammy reconciles his feelings of creative loss and reflects on memories of his grandmother and of his most important weddings. Like the flowers which he excises from nature, he must excise his love for his art in order to preserve the art that he loves. Ultimately Sammy realizes that much like the flowers that transform into something new, so too do his dreams.

  • Dos Mujeres (Two Women)

    Through the lives of Raima, an Indian techie on a work visa, and Maria, a Mexican house cleaner, this film sheds light on the flaws of the immigration system, highlighting the diverse challenges faced by immigrants.

  • Roots & Wings Ep3

    Roots & Wings profiles WOC chefs who use food as a conduit for cultural awareness and as a means of perpetuating their cultural traditions. Roots + Wings Ep 3. Iranian-American multi-disciplinary visual artist and culinary creative behind Savage Taste, Parisa Parnian hosted pop-up dinners in Los Angeles that not only illuminated Persian cuisine but also brought together the LGBTQ community.

  • Project 212: Engineering the Future

    In the world of high school robotics, it is blindingly clear students are not competing on a level playing field. Project 212 hails from Ygnacio Valley and faces more challenges than most. Just over the hill from the Bay Area and Silicon Valley, four out of five students are economically disadvantaged. Experience is short and resources limited. Project 212 believes in itself though. But is grit, devoted mentors, and a teacher committed to building young leaders enough to compete against the best teams in the world?

Q&A GUESTS

  • RJ Siu

    RJ Siu - DIRECTOR, KOI

    RJ Siu is a Los Angeles-based freelance Writer, Director, and Cinematographer. After graduating from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts with a major in Film Production (2019), he has worked on numerous projects ranging from narrative shorts/features and music videos to commercial and branded content. Alongside his sister, Jalin, he is also a content creator with videos garnering over 100M+ views, and 1M+ followers on across platforms. Above all, RJ is passionate about humanistic storytelling, especially projects that focus on the Asian American narrative.

  • Mia J. Chong

    Mia J. Chong – Choreographer, Sonder

    MIA J. CHONG (she/they) is a choreographer and dancer from San Francisco, California, the Indigenous lands of the Ramaytush Ohlone and Muwekma people. Mia currently choreographs and performs throughout the Bay Area, and is the founding Artistic Director of contemporary dance company EIGHT/MOVES. Learn more at eightmoves.org.

  • Chad Panday Santo Tomas

    Chad Panday Santo Tomas – DIRECTOR, Sammy's Final Arrangement

    A photojournalist at heart, the transition to directing and filmmaking was a natural catalyst to bring a deeper cultural and human experience to the screen. Inspired by a cross-cultural Asian upbringing and time spent living in Asia, the films I create are inspired and motivated by the anthropological differences and cultural nuances among Asians and the translated migrant Asian experience. I've since used this mindset to translate this experience into my restaurant photography and short documentary work.

  • Shankey Srinivasan

    Shankey Srinivasan– DIRECTOR, Dos Mujeres (Two Women)

    Shankey Srinivasan is an award winning Indian-American filmmaker based in the San Francisco Bay Area in California. His films have played at prestigious events around the world and have won awards in competition. His debut feature film "The Last Smile" won best picture at Burbank Int'l Film Festival and Louisville's Int'l Festival of Film, Audience choice award at Philadephia Asian American Film Festival and Jury Award at Santa Cruz Film Festival.

  • Lisa Yadao

    Lisa Yadao – DIRECTOR, Roots & Wings Ep3

    Lisa Yadao is a Hawaiian-Filipina producer and screenwriter raised in SoCal and based in San Francisco. She earned a BA in English from San Diego State University, studied screenwriting at UC San Diego and video production at Bay Area Video Coalition. Her credits include short films, TV and web series, and videos for HBOMax, Bobbie Baby, FWD Stance, Square and Caviar.

  • Brady Anderson

    Brady Anderson – DIRECTOR, Project 212: Engineering the Future

    Brady Anderson is an empathic storyteller who is obsessed with crafting narratives that tug at the heartstrings of audiences. Diplomatic and with an eye for detail, he takes pride in his ability to build trust with his film participants in order capture the most intimate and authentic moments on camera.

    Previous films include The Cook and Her Farmer; Food, Family and Fresno; Smoking Good Food and Goodwill; and Change the System: Building Black Wealth.

  • JOSEPH ALVARICO- CA TEACHER OF THE YEAR, PROJECT 212: ENGINEERING THE FUTURE

    Born in the Philippines to a family of educators, Alvarico has a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology and a Bachelor of Secondary Education degree. After answering an MDUSD ad seeking teachers in the Philippines, Alvarico immigrated to the United States in 2004 and initially began his MDUSD teaching career at Oak Grove MS, along with several other teachers hired from the Philippines. After 12 years, Alvarico transferred to Ygnacio Valley HS, where he has worked for eight years. He combines previous on-the-job experience in the tech industry in the Philippines into his lessons while also focusing on community-building with his students. He strives to show all his students their potential and the possibilities available when they leave high school, no matter their economic status. In 2024, Joseph Alvarico was named California Teacher of the Year.

  • Ellina Yin

    Ellina Yin - Moderator

    Ellina Yin is a first-gen Cambodian American social practice artist, activist, and entrepreneur who works at the intersection of art, technology, and lawmaking to reimagine the future of civic participation in local government. Ellina is the Founder & CEO of Only in San José (OSJ) a civic education and media organization transforming the City of San José’s practice of civic engagement by providing the people of San José with the knowledge, skills, resources, and confidence to create the change they wish to see in their communities.