Archive

Make That “Award-Winning” Feature Documentary!

Hi Friends,

I’m pleased to announce that “A Bridge Life” has won a “Chris” Award from the 57th Annual Columbus International Film and Video Festival!  We have been tapped to receive a Bronze Plaque from the Film Council of Greater Columbus (Ohio).  The festival runs from Nov. 11 through Nov. 15.  Not sure yet about screening details, but we’ve been invited to an awards dinner on Saturday, Nov. 14 at the Columbus College of Art & Design.

Of course, I’ll be in Columbus four weeks before that for the Oct. 7 screening of ABL at the Wexner Center for the Arts.  I’m really looking forward to that screening and Q&A, not only cause I have family in Ohio, but also because I’ll be joined by Steven Glaser, Professor of Piano at Ohio State and our illustrious composer.  I also might be interviewed by a local radio program so keep checking back for details on that and other press “A Bridge Life” has been getting.

Last month’s private New York screening was fantastic!  Thanks for all those who came out for it.  Our email list keeps getting bigger and bigger. So if you’re reading this and haven’t signed up for updates, please send an email to info@abridgelife.com and we’ll be sure to give you the latest news.

Hopefully I’ll have some more good festival news to report in a few weeks.

Stay tuned!

Josh

Don’t miss ABL at the Wexner Center for the Arts in Ohio!

The Wexner Center for the Arts (www.wexarts.org) in Ohio with their “year-round festival of independent filmmaking, international cinema, new documentaries, and classics from the familiar to the forgotten” will be screening “A Bridge Life: Finding Our Way Home” as part of their visiting filmmakers series on Wednesday, October 7th at 7pm! Ohio State music professor, Steven Glaser, composed the film’s score (minus the Johnny Cash song) will introduce the film along with director, Josh Grossberg. Come one and come all!

We are in the Naples International Film Festival!!!

Greetings one and all,

We are very happy to announce A Bridge Life has been accepted to the Naples International Film Festival running Nov. 5 through Nov. 8.

As soon as we have the exact dates and time, we will list them in our screenings/press section.

Again, thank you to everyone and please stay tuned for more exciting news on the way!


NYC Private Screening

For our special and close supporters in the New York City area, we are excited to announce a private advanced showing of A Bridge Life!

BY INVITATION ONLY:
The Scandinavia House, 58 Park Avenue (btwn 37th & 38th Streets)
6:30pm Cocktail Reception
7:30pm Screening Begins, followed by Q & A

Please contact filmmaker Josh Grossberg with any questions.

We’re in Ft. Lauderdale!!!

Hi Everyone,

We’ve got some thrilling news!  A Bridge Life has been accepted to the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival running Oct. 23 through Nov. 8.

This will be our Florida premiere and a very special occasion as a good chunk of the story is set in South Florida and much of Dan and the group’s activities relied on the goodwill of the Ft. Lauderdale/Broward County community.  No word yet on exact screening dates.  But as soon as we know, we’ll let YOU know.

Thanks for sticking with us and, just as a reminder, you can help Josh and his team immensely in getting the film and its important, inspiring message out to the world by donating via the “See Your Name” campaign on this Website.

World Premiere Wrap Up!

Hi everyone,

Last week’s world premiere of “A Bridge Life: Finding Our Way Home” was a big success.  We had a sizeable crowd despite our Wednesday afternoon time slot and I’m pleased to report hankies were needed at several points during the screening.  We held a Q&A afterward and nearly everyone stayed and asked in-depth questions about the evacuees, dan’s journey and my own experience in the Astrodome.  I’m excited because the premiere reaffirmed that we need to just continue to get this movie out there to as wide an audience as possible and once we do, people will definitely respond and be affected by it.  Everybody was at Newport last Wednesday.

Aside from working on getting into other festivals (SilverDocs that means you), I’m looking into hold a private screening for friends and family in New York in June and one in Florida so Dan and his crew can finally see it.  Details to follow in the coming weeks.

In the meantime, my team and I are going to savor our Newport debut.

Best,

Josh

world premiere!!!

I have some great news to share. The feature-length Katrina documentary that I produced, wrote and directed and finished recently after nearly four years, A Bridge Life: Finding Our Way Home, is going to have its world premiere at the Newport Beach International Film Festival on Wednesday, April 29th at 2:15 p.m.

I would love to invite each and every one of you to attend the premiere if you’re in the area and get the buzz going.  Help keep the spotlight on the rebuilding process which is trudging along at a slow pace in the Gulf and New Orleans.  Help us to remind government officials and the public about the need for continued support for the thousands of evacuees spread all around the country in a forced exodus who want to return home. Help us spread the word!

-Josh

Click on this link for more information and to buy tickets for A Bridge Life.

Newport Beach Film Festival

The Score!

Good News Everybody!

After several long months of composing, arranging and recording, our composer, Steven Glaser, completed the original score for “A Bridge Life” and it has now been added to the picture.  And let me be the first to congratulate him on a job well done.  The documentary is now complimented by some wonderfully inventive music that I think raises the film to a whole ‘nother level.  When you see it, I know you’ll agree.

So all that remains essentially is a final color correct and audio mix.  To do that however, I still need to license archival footage featuring watermarks from various archival houses (Getty and Corbis for example) and replace those shots with high-res versions so we can color correct the film.  We’re so close to the finish line that I barely can contain my excitement.  I’m hoping in the next month or so to have some very big news regarding screenings.  Thanks for your patience and please stay tuned!

Josh

Gustav: A Stark Reminder

The third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina arrived last Friday and with it a new hurricane to threaten the Gulf Coast’s shores.  Gustav rumbled across the Louisiana coastline on Monday, bringing the Republican National Convention to a near halt and offering up a stark reminder of what Katrina had wrought there three short years ago.

The good news is that both local, state and federal agencies had learned their lesson and coordinated a successful evacuation of New Orleans and surrounding coastal areas from what Mayor Ray Nagin pronounced hyperbolically, the “storm of the century.”  However exaggerated his words may have been, people heeded the warnings and made their way inland.  Luckily, Gustav turned out not to be the cat 4 killer that some had feared but still an intense category three storm that dealt the Crescent City a glancing blow.  This time around, there were not victims on rooftops, survivors holed up in dome stadiums hoping for authorities to come to the rescue.

But by no means does the lesser magnitude of the storm mean Gulf Coast residents weren’t in need of help.  This time around, Dan Sheffer stayed in Florida.  And for good reason.  Hurricane Hannah and Ike are eyeing the Sunshine State coastline as I write this and he’s got to take care of his own family and home.  After spending the last year or so helping people affordably hurricane proof their houses, our documentary subject may face his own potential Katrina if forecasts for Ike hold over the next few days.

While Dan couldn’t go to help Gulf Coast evacuees this time around, he hopes you’ll take the time to consider the importance of volunteering your time and money to help those devastated by Gustav or any other disaster.  That’s what A Bridge Life is about: people helping people.  I also would like to implore you to help us finish the film and tell Dan’s story by making a donation.  In return, we’ll list your name in the credits. Just check out our See Your Name Campaign section for more details.

Thanks for your support.

Josh

Welcome to A Bridge Life…

Dear friends,

It’s my pleasure to welcome you to the official Website for our feature-length documentary entitled A Bridge Life: Finding Our Way Home From Katrina. This film has been nearly three years in the making and attempts to chronicle one small heartfelt story out of thousands that came out of that terrible storm which devastated the Gulf Coast and New Orleans.

When I started out on this journey, I, like many others, wanted to help Katrina survivors any way I could, even if it meant just handing out water bottles and greeting them with a smile. But what eventually transpired in those critical days after the catastrophe evolved into a much richer experience for everyone involved and a tale that needed to be told. Despite losing everything, many evacuees still had faith, not necessarily in our government, but in God and the common man. Much of that feeling was because of the overwhelming volunteer response that came from Houstonians and countless others who flew in from around the country, wanting to ease their burdens and share their pain. In the midst of this American crisis, there was, for a brief moment, a palpable sense of community that coursed through the Houston Astrodome and surrounding venues that sheltered thousands of Louisiana’s exhausted and stunned residents. In a way, Katrina’s terrible wrath brought out the best in humanity. And this feeling that “we’re all in this together” is what motivated us to lend a hand. It also spurred us to capture this communal spirit as filmmakers through the story of Dan Sheffer, a Good Samaritan from South Florida who traveled to Houston and flew seven evacuees back to the Sunshine State to help them get back on their feet with temporary jobs and a place to lay their heads–in essence, to provide them with “a bridge life.”

Aside from issuing the usual news updates, screening times and venues, press clippings and reviews of A Bridge Life as well as what we hope will be regular blog postings from the creative team, this Website will also provide supplemental material intended to enhance your knowledge of the story and the documentary’s participants outside of the film itself. Such material may include transcripts of interviews not featured in A Bridge Life, photo essays and additional information to keep viewers abreast not only with what’s going on with some of the evacuees, but also with the rebuilding of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. I would further like to encourage visitors to check out our Links section for valuable resources pertaining to New Orleans’ revival post-Katrina, like Brad Pitt’s “Make It Right” Foundation for instance.

I’m very very proud of the work my team has put into A Bridge Life: Finding Our Way Home From Katrina. But we still have a ways to go in terms of its completion. Therefore I would like to request your help. You’ll notice a menu option that says, “See Your Name” as well as a donate button on the right-hand side. This film has been funded primarily by loans and small donations from a variety of family members and supporters, which is why we’re asking you to make a contribution to assist us in making up the difference. Aside from helping us pay for a final audio mix and color correction, the majority of you’re donation, however small, will go towards covering the hefty cost of licensing fees from various news sources and archival houses. I can’t tell you how expensive such fees can get. In return for your contribution however, we’re excited to offer a unique opportunity–the chance to have your names listed in the credits and join other backers in inspiring people to make a difference in each other’s lives by helping tell Dan and his group’s amazing story. Even $5 will get us that much closer to our goal, so please, donate whatever you can.

Lastly, it’s my aim that this Website will eventually serve as the launch pad for a series of A Bridge Life films, each of which will attempt to chronicle the intimate stories of survivors going about the difficult task of rebuilding after major disasters. This is a long-term prospect but one that will again seek to stress the life-affirming idea that “we’re all in this together.”

Sincerely,

Joshua Grossberg

Director