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Schools

Barrington High School Students Compete In Silent Film Festival

Students from Barrington High School will compete against ten other high schools in the Student Silent Film Festival at the Tivoli Theatre.

The Student Silent Film Festival (SSFF) is a film competition in which students from eleven high schools created original motion pictures. Unlike other film competitions, however, the movies submitted will tell their stories in visual terms without the aid of voices or sound effects.

Students from Barrington High School (BHS) came together to create a film that will be premiered at Student Silent Film Festival at 7 p.m. Wednesday, January 25, 2023, at the Tivoli Theatre, 5021 Highland Avenue, Downers Grove.

“Thanks to the hard work of the BHS-TV students and the support of the Barrington community, BHS-TV is one of the most successful high school video programs in the country,” said Jeffrey M Doles, Ph.D., TV/Video Production Teacher at Barrington High School. "Students enrolled in the video course have raised over six million dollars for charities and have earned over 70 Student Excellence Awards from the National Television Academy."

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All submitted movies will be shown at the Student Silent Film Festival with live musical accompaniment by Derek Berg who is a professional pianist and CEO of the Clarendon Hills Music Academy. The musical scores will be performed on the SilentFilmtronic 2000, a uniquely designed keyboard rig that employs virtual instruments sampled from classic synthesizers circa 1950 - 1980. Berg’s original compositions will be inspired by the soundtracks from the Network series “Stranger Things.”

Participating high schools and media instructors:

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  • Lyons Township - Bill Allan
  • Maine East - Phillip Ash
  • Victor J. Andrew - Laura Robinson
  • Riverside/Brookfield - Gary Prokes
  • Vernon Hills - Sandy Martin
  • Barrington - Jeff Doles
  • Lake Forest - Steve Douglas
  • Mundelein - Kent Meister
  • Maine South - Mason Strom
  • Neuqua Valley - John Gelsomino
  • Alan B. Shephard - Jodi Pelini

The Silent Movie is an art form unto itself. The ability to tell a story in purely visual terms, without the aid of a synchronized soundtrack, is a special skill with its own set of challenges and opportunities.

Beginning in the mid-1910s, small suburban theatres employed a piano player, but large city theaters had massive theatre organs that had a wide range of special effects. Theatrical organs such as the famous "Mighty Wurlitzer" could simulate some orchestral sounds along with a number of percussion effects such as bass drums and cymbals and sound effects ranging from train and boat whistles to car horns and birdsong. Some could even simulate pistol shots, ringing phones, the sound of the surf, horses' hooves, smashing pottery, and thunder and rain.

“We believe it is important for the upcoming young moviemakers of today to understand and appreciate the art of cinema as it existed in the 1920s,” Newmann said. “At a time when almost anyone can create high-definition, stereophonic, sync-sound movies with a mobile device that fits in his or her pocket, many young people have little idea of the challenges faced by early filmmakers.”

Each school was given four weeks to create its silent film entry.

For the festival, a panel of judges — all professionals in the entertainment or art education industries – will select three winners based on the quality of the story narrative, development, camera work, lighting, and editing.

Each participant will be provided with an HD digital file of his or her movie with the accompaniment sound track.

“In addition to being an incomparable experience for all the participating students,” Newmann said, “the winning filmmakers will have powerful pieces of work for their portfolios.”

The public is invited to the film festival. Advance tickets are $18 and can be ordered at https://www.studentsilentfilmfestival.org/. Same day tickets are $25 at the door.

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