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CONTRA COSTA TIMES
April 2004

"The FIlmmaker"
By Cassandra Braun

JAY ROSENBLATT has made an art out of keeping it short. For more than 20  years, the San Francisco filmmaker has created engaging short films that  explore social and emotional issues, using archival and found footage. Rosenblatt has even garnered recognition for his compelling body of  work. His films have screened at the Sundance Film Festival seven times  (among a host of other major national and international film festivals),  and have earned him a plethora of prestigious awards and fellowships,  not to mention an impressive spread in the Sunday Arts and Leisure  section of the New York Times.

"Human Remains," which features old footage of modern history's most  notorious dictators -- including Hitler and Stalin -- doing banal,  everyday tasks has been in regular circulation on the Independent Film  Channel. And his most recent work, a warmhearted ode to fatherhood  titled "I Used to Be a Filmmaker," will air on Cinemax on Father's Day. Still, Rosenblatt isn't exactly a marquee name. When you create edgy  films that are shorter than the average TV sitcom, you're not likely to  make People or Variety. But then, making commercially viable,  feature-length films was never his aim.

Rosenblatt trained as a psychologist, falling into filmmaking only when  he took a Super-8 film production class on a whim. Later, attending the  MFA film program at San Francisco State, it became clear to the Brooklyn  native that filmmaking was a calling that satisfied a deep need for  expression. "I just fell in love with it," says Rosenblatt. "I really made a  commitment that regardless of what I did, I would continue to make films." As it turned out, the short film format best suited his experimental  style and intense themes. "There are some writers who just write short stories; not all writers  write novels. So it's kind of similar in a sense." As a result, his movies -- like "The Smell of Burning Ants," which looks  at male socialization and boyhood cruelty -- explore social and  emotional issues without the standard character study or story arc of  feature films. And that means finding an audience is a challenge. "I want as many people to see my work as possible, but I'm not willing  to dumb down the work just so that large numbers see it," he says. Rosenblatt hasn't ruled out a feature-length film project in the future,  although it's not likely to be anything close to a Hollywood  blockbuster. And there's always the funding issue. Aside from a smattering of grant money and the occasional sale of a film  to a cable outlet, Rosenblatt doesn't make a living with his movies.  Film may be his art, but teaching is his bread-and-butter. As long as  he's been making movies, he has taught the craft at local universities  including S.F. State, Stanford and currently, the San Francisco Art  Institute. Filmmaking must be crammed into weekends, school breaks or  spare time not already devoted to his 3-year-old daughter, Ella. Still, Rosenblatt has no intention of quitting. "I think art is one of  the greatest things about being human. To me, that's one of the reasons  to live."

         

 



Jay Rosenblatt Films
Jay@JayRosenblattFilms.com

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