Imagine a
young child, eye level with a floor full of miniature toys, concentrating
intently on
building a make-believe world. To the child,
the toys are not miniature figures made of plastic or wood. They are
real characters with real adventures. The child frames the action,
crafting scenes that unfold in a world of imagination. Looking through
the lens
of a camera as actors, interview subjects and animated characters bring
to life a young person's story, the filmmaker is also peering into
a world of imagination.
Moondance International Film Festival, through its Dolphin Contest,
seeks to honor what young international filmmakers and youthful activists
can
bring to the screen—agility, inventiveness, passionate idealism — and,
at the same time, to motivate and inspire our children and young people
to speak out, forge alliances rooted in mutual respect and a synthesis
of different experiences and points of view, and make a better world
for their future, or to just dynamically express themselves in their
own unique way. Through the screenings of these films, kids can share
their visions with kids and with adults.
Kids take stock of the diverse array of social causes and issues around
which our world's young people are becoming mobilized to illuminate
and act upon the interconnections between circumstances at home and
around
the world. Through film, and with their intense and dogged curiosity
about how the world works, they can find a new way to communicate to
a wider audience how to change the status quo and interface between
world youth activism and global engagement, and the ways young activists
can
work together to tackle their common global issues. Young people are
playing important roles in a number of areas where international and
domestic problems (and their solutions) overlap.
We are building a bridge, through the art of film, to encourage international
awareness and understanding for young people from the elementary grades
through high school. Those filmmakers who see portents in the shape
of things to come—of an unfolding shift in generational consciousness,
a gathering global rights movement, the flowering of flexible, Internet-based
activist network—may in the end prove to be prescient. This commitment,
this yearning, broadens out to a sense of community responsibility
that is internationalist in its scope. Global issues strike home. It
is such
an exploration that this competition seeks to launch, by championing
globally-minded youth activism among young people around the world,
and the ways in which these young activists can work together to tackle
global
issues creatively, through animation films, documentary films and short
films.