I AM IN LOVE WITH OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT: "The Last Repair Shop" - AmNews Curtain Raiser

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Thursday, February 1, 2024

I AM IN LOVE WITH OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT: "The Last Repair Shop"

 












OSCAR® NOMINATED DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILM ‘THE LAST REPAIR SHOP’ IS NOW STREAMING ON DISNEY+ AND HULU

Winner of the Critics Choice Documentary Award for Best Documentary Short


Also Available to Watch for Free on YouTube and LATimes.com from Searchlight Pictures and L.A. Times Studios

Watch Now Here (Full 39-Minute Film)
https://youtu.be/xttrkgKXtZ4?si=HO02BhzJAZPN5rMO

From Oscar® and Grammy®-nominated and Emmy®-winning filmmaker, musician and LAUSD star alumni Kris Bowers (A Concerto is a ConversationGreen BookKing RichardQueen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story) and Oscar® winning director Ben Proudfoot (two-time Oscar® nominee for The Queen of Basketball and A Concerto is a Conversation), comes THE LAST REPAIR SHOP, a film about LAUSD’s unique free and freely-repaired musical instrument repair shop, which helped launch countless illustrious careers and millions of music lovers.

Ben Proudfoot (Left) and Kris Bowers (Right). Photo by Getty Images.

“We are enormously grateful to the Academy’s Documentary Branch for lifting up this story and we are deeply honored to lead the charge to bring The Last Repair Shop to the 96th Oscars. This film is about magnifying love and the people whose love makes the world go around. The fixers. The helpers. Those who lift us up with song. It is our duty to support and encourage and applaud them. Love, music, healing; these are the things that make the world go around and we found that story in an inconspicuous corner of LA’s public school district. This nomination is a win for the repair shop, for Los Angeles, and for all music loving people who believe in the will to repair. In many places in the world, young people have zero access to musical instruments. This nomination can help send a powerful message. You can’t stop the music.”

– Kris Bowers and Ben Proudfoot, Co-Directors of The Last Repair Shop



The Last Repair Shop had its world premiere at the 2023 Telluride Film Festival. It subsequently had its international premiere at the Calgary International Film Festival where it won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary Short. The film also won the Matt Decample Audience Choice Award for Best Short at the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival and the Audience Award for Special Presentation at the Middleburg Film Festival where co-director Kris Bowers also received the Sheila Johnson Vanguard Award. In an early review, Awards Daily said, “The Last Repair Shop speaks to our humanity and highlights how important the arts are to our development, growth, and survival.” BGR named The Last Repair Shop the best documentary of 2023.

The film has also received honors such as the Critics Choice Documentary Award for Best Short Documentary and was nominated for Best Score. It was nominated for Best Score by the Hollywood Music in Media Awards, Outstanding Independent Short Film by the Black Reel Awards, and Best Short by the Hollywood Creative Alliance's (HCA) Astra Film Awards. The film was also included on DOC NYC’s influential 15-film Short List as well as the Cinema Eye Honors' 10-film Shorts List.

Once commonplace in the United States, today Los Angeles is by far the largest and one of the last American cities to provide free and freely repaired musical instruments to its public schoolchildren, a continuous service since 1959.  The Last Repair Shop grants an all access pass to the nondescript downtown warehouse where a dwindling handful of devoted craftspeople keep over 80,000 student instruments in good repair.

Led by the charming general manager, Steve Bagmanyan, the film introduces a technician from each department: Dana Atkinson, in the strings division, who takes us to his personal breaking point as a young man confronting his sexuality; Paty Moreno, in charge of brass and the sole woman in the shop, who chronicles her pursuit of the American dream as a Mexican immigrant and single mother; Duane Michaels, a quirky, self-described hillbilly who fixes the woodwind instruments and shares the rip-roaring tale of how his $20 fiddle took him on tour with Elvis; and finally Steve himself, who learned to tune pianos in America after surviving a harrowing escape from ethnic persecution in Azerbaijan in the late 1980s, a conflict again in the headlines today.

The film blends the unexpectedly intimate personal histories of the repair people with emotional, firsthand accounts from the actual student musicians for whom their instruments made all the difference. Porché, 9, shares how her beloved violin helps her cope with her family’s health problems; college-bound Manuel, 18, states that his enormous sousaphone diverted him from the pitfalls of growing up as a low-income kid from Boyle Heights; Ismerai, 15, whose alto sax brought her much-needed discipline and calm; and the bookish Amanda, 17, brought to tears by her profound connection with the piano. 

“I found out that Steve, one of the main storytellers in the film, personally tuned the school pianos that I grew up playing and learning on,” said Co-Director Kris Bowers, “I had no idea this shop existed until I started making the film with Ben, but The Last Repair Shop became a passionate love letter paying a delayed debt of gratitude to those unsung heroes who gave me and countless others the gift of music. It’s not too much to say I owe my career to people like the four repair people in our film.”

“Every child deserves the opportunity to play music,” said Bowers’ Co-Director Ben Proudfoot, “Because music is not only a worthy discipline and sometimes a wonderful career, but it can also be a healing force that can repair our deepest traumas and teach us to play our part. With The Last Repair Shop, we wanted to celebrate that spirit and pay tribute to a truly unique program that has produced countless legends from John Williams to Kendrick Lamar.” 

Since its premiere, The Last Repair Shop has screened at four LAUSD schools for thousands of public school students. At each screening, students had the opportunity to interact with the filmmakers and the repair shop staff. In addition to the screenings, the students enjoyed a live performance by Kris with special guests including Grammy-nominated artists such as Kamasi Washington and Alex Isley.

Directed by Ben Proudfoot & Kris Bowers. Executive Produced by Jane Solomon, Peter Rotter, Ben Proudfoot, Kris Bowers, & Briana Henry. Produced by Ben Proudfoot, Kris Bowers, Jeremy Lambert & Josh Rosenberg. Edited by Nick Garnham Wright. Cinematography by David Feeney-Mosier. Original Score by Katya Richardson, with themes by Kris Bowers. Featuring Dana Atkinson, Paty Moreno, Duane Michaels & Steve Bagmanyan. For L.A. Times Studios: Executive Producers Sharon Matthews, Terry Tang, Jason Spingarn-Koff & Leslie Lindsey, Co-Executive Producers Shani Hilton and Nani Walker, Senior Publishing Producer, Karen Foshay, and Associate Producer, Jessica Q. Chen.


About Searchlight Pictures
Searchlight Pictures is a global specialty film and television company that develops, produces, finances, and acquires motion pictures and series for both worldwide theatrical and streaming releases. It has its own marketing and distribution operations, and is part of The Walt Disney Studios, a division of The Walt Disney Company. Founded in 1994 as Fox Searchlight Pictures, the company’s titles have grossed over $5 billion worldwide, amassing 46 Academy Awards including five Best Picture winners since 2009:  Slumdog Millionaire12 Years a Slave, Birdman,The Shape of Water, and Nomadland; 55 BAFTA Awards, 32 Golden Globe Awards, and 10 Grammy Awards. Searchlight Television, the division that develops and produces series for streaming, network, and cable partners, earned a Primetime Emmy Award for Best Actress and an additional 5 nominations for its first production “The Dropout'' from Elizabeth Meriwether, in partnership with Hulu and 20th Studios.  Searchlight recently released Molly Gordon and Nick Lieberman’s award-winning Sundance debut feature comedy Theater Camp; Eva Longoria’s Flamin’ Hot; Mark Mylod’s global hit The Menu; and Martin McDonagh’s Academy Award-nominated and BAFTA-winning The Banshees of Inisherin. Recent releases include Taika Waititi’s Next Goal Wins; Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things starring and produced by Emma Stone; and Andrew Haigh’s critically acclaimed romantic drama All of Us Strangers.

About L.A. Times Studios
L.A. Times Studios, a division of California Times, produces a variety of critically acclaimed audio, video and live event projects. They develop projects that are grounded in editorial integrity and driven by the power of storytelling and collaborate with a variety of partners, internally and externally, on both original productions and branded entertainment. The Studios group is platform-agnostic and pursues compelling narratives and conversations across a variety of media.

About Breakwater Studios
Founded in 2012 by Forbes 30 Under 30 entrepreneur and Academy Award®-winning director Ben Proudfoot, Breakwater Studios has been a pioneer in the world of short documentaries, connecting with millions of people around the world through their humanist, high-quality films. The studio’s work has been recognized by the Academy Awards®, The Emmys®, The Peabody Awards, The James Beard Awards, the Sundance Film Festival, the Telluride Film Festival, the Tribeca Film Festival, and SXSW among others. 

About the Directors
Ben Proudfoot is an Academy Award® winning short-documentary director and entrepreneur, the creative force behind Breakwater Studios. The studio’s work has been recognized by the Academy Awards®, The Emmys®, The Peabody Awards, Critics Choice Documentary Awards, The James Beard Awards, the Sundance Film Festival, Telluride, and the Tribeca Film Festival among others. Proudfoot was named one of Forbes "30 Under 30" for his leadership and innovation in the brand-funded documentary space. He hails from Halifax, Nova Scotia, and is a University of Southern California graduate. Proudfoot is an accomplished sleight-of-hand magician and has performed at The Magic Castle in Los Angeles.

Kris Bowers is an Emmy® Award-winning, two-time Grammy®-nominated and Academy Award®-nominated filmmaker and composer. A Juilliard-educated pianist, Bowers creates genre-defying music that pays homage to his jazz roots— with inflections of alternative and R&B influences. Composing the original scores for Best Picture GREEN BOOK and Netflix hit QUEEN CHARLOTTE among many notable credits, Bowers has established himself at the forefront of Hollywood’s emerging generation of composers. Bowers’ music is at the helm of some of the top films of the year including Ava DuVernay’s ORIGIN, Warner Bros. THE COLOR PURPLE, and BOB MARLEY: ONE LOVE due early 2024. As an accomplished filmmaker, Bowers has multiple projects in development through his Et Al Studios Productions. Most recently, he co-directed the documentary THE LAST REPAIR SHOP alongside Ben Proudfoot, which was released in November with Searchlight Pictures and L.A. Times Studios. Previously, Bowers garnered an Oscar nomination for “Best Documentary Short Film” for his film A CONCERTO IS A CONVERSATION (2020), which he also directed alongside Ben Proudfoot.

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