The 14th annual Cinema on the Bayou, which runs Wednesday through Jan. 30, in Lafayette will present 181 films, nearly all of them Louisiana premieres. The stateâs second largest film festival will also feature world and United States premieres.
âWhen we have a world premiere, itâs a big deal for our festival,â said the festival's director, Rebecca Hudsmith. âIt means that weâre launching a filmâs festival run.â
Cinema on the Bayou will take place at the Acadiana Center for the Arts and other venues around Lafayette. The nonprofit, volunteer-run festival also features filmmaker Q&As, music, parties, panel discussions and workshops.
The festivalâs 2019 world premieres include âAnd Those Who Dance It Surrender Their Hearts To Each Other,â a documentary about Lone Piñon, a group of young New Mexico musicians who perform traditional works from the Southwest.
It's a story that resonates in Acadiana.
âItâs about saving traditional music and culture in New Mexico,â Hudsmith said. âThatâs what our Cajun musicians are about, so thereâs a real connection. Itâs a beautiful film with music that I wasnât even aware of.â
Another world premiere, âFinding Cajun,â examines the origin and evolution of Cajun identity over the past 70 years. Nathan Rabalais, a Eunice native who is assistant professor of French and Francophone studies at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, directed the documentary. It screens at 7 p.m. Jan. 30 at the Acadiana Center for the Arts.
âFinding Cajun,â said Pat Mire, Cinema on the Bayou founder and artistic director, presents a fresh take on the Cajun experience.
âItâs a young perspective on the culture,â Mire said. âThings have changed dramatically in the past 15 or 20 years. More young people want to speak French.â
Mireâs own award-winning documentaries include âDirty Riceâ and âAgainst the Tide: The Story of the Cajun People of Louisiana.â
âWeâre excited,â Hudsmith said, âthat a new generation of young scholars and filmmakers are continuing to do what others started, including Pat Mire.â
True to Cinema on the Bayouâs southwest Louisiana roots, more than 60 of the festivalâs films are in French. The festival is furthering its French connection through partnerships with two major Canadian festivals, Les Percéides Festival International de Cinéma et dâ art de Percé and the Québec City Film Festival.
Opening night film âBlack Indians,â screening at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 23 at the Acadiana Center for the Arts, links New Orleans and France. Four years in the making, the documentary depicts the Mardi Gras Indians of New Orleans.
Already screened throughout France, âBlack Indiansâ will receive its U.S. premiere at Cinema on the Bayou. Patrouilleau, the filmâs Paris-based co-writer-director, will be among the more than 200 directors, producers, cinematographers, actors and other film professionals from France, Canada, the U.S., Australia, Japan and Lebanon in attendance.
âWe have a warm festival here,â Mire said. âWe try to welcome everyone."
Friends of Hudsmith and Mire in Paris recommended that the makers of âBlack Indiansâ submit their film to Cinema on the Bayou.
âThere have been other films about the New Orleans Mardi Gras Indians," Hudsmith said, "but this one comes from the French perspective. And itâs a film with a Louisiana connection, which we love. We also feel like our festival starts the Mardi Gras season. So, we usually have a least one Mardi Gras film. And we always want to show culturally significant projects.â
Judges at the 2019 festival include prominent members of Quebecâs filmmaking community, among them Montréal writer-director Marc-André Forcier (âCoteau Rouge.â âThe Countess of Baton Rouge,â âA Wind from Wyomingâ).
âIâm excited about that,â Mire said. âIt says that we are the go-to festival for Canadian filmmakers. They passed up Sundance and other festivals to come here. Itâs the French-Louisiana connection again. And they fall in love with our food and music.â
Musicians performing at the festival include two local bands, Yvette Landry and the Jukes and Roddie Romero and the Hub City All-Stars, and a singer-songwriter from New Brunswick, Canada, Daniel Léger.
âMusic is a key element of this festival,â Mire said. âAnd itâs not just musicians playing at the festival, itâs the filmmakers drifting to venues beyond the festival.â
Films in competition at Cinema on the Bayou are eligible to win one of festivalâs Goujon Caille awards. Local artists Pat and Andre Juneau create the colorful catfish-shaped statuettes.
This year also includes the festivalâs first artist in residence, John Blouin. A filmmaker from Quebec, heâs brought an installation to the Acadiana Center for the Arts.
Tickets to individual screenings are $5, except for "Black Indians" ($20) and "Finding Cajun" ($10). Eight-day passes are $100; day passes are $10-$20. More information about the festival is available at cinemaonthebayou.com.






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