The Burial of Natty Bumppo (Fred Burns, 2023) | Filmmaker Q&A to Follow

Location: Rubenstein Arts Center Film Theater

The Burial of Natty Bumppo
(Fred Burns, 2023, 28 min, USA, English, DCP)

-- Q&A to follow with writer/director Fred Burns and producer Casey Herbert.

Built from over 28,000 hand-drawn images, The Burial of Natty Bumppo draws on 19th century cultural images of American innocence to reveal their grotesque outcomes: the enslavement of human beings, the genocide that accompanied colonization, and the environmental degradation resulting from industrialization. The film almost never made it to screen – it was rescued, restored, and digitally mastered by filmmaker Casey Herbert in 2019, and finished in 2023.

The Burial of Natty Bumppo has been shown at the Montreal International Animation Film Festival (2023) and the Bucharest International Animation Festival (2023). It won the awards for Best Animated Short at Indie Short Fest in Los Angeles (2024), the California International Film Festival (2024), and at the Paris International Short Awards (April 2024). Most recently if was recognized with the "Outstanding Cultural Contribution in a Short" from the Portland Festival of Cinema, Animation & Technology, and "Best Animation Short" from the Vancouver International Shortfest.

-- North Carolina Premiere

Fred Burns is an award-winning animator who taught animation production, animation history, and live action production at Duke University. He now lives in Taos, New Mexico, where he draws and paints all day.

Casey Herbert is the founder of the Flying Foto Factory, an animation production studio in North Carolina. He specializes in 2D and 3D animation, motion control and stop motion photography, and special venue production. His collaboration with Burns on The Burial of Natty Bumppo dates back to the early 1980's. He is currently also a Lecturing Fellow in Cinematic Arts at Duke University.  


Related Exhibit (October 4 - November 18, 2024): 

"From Pencils to Pixels: The Evolution of an Animated Film" charts the myriad steps involved in the production of an animated film, using The Burial of Natty Bumppo as its example. Content will be presented on screens, as physical art as produced, storyboards, animatics, pencil tests, 35mm film as shot, scanning technology, and more!

Location: The Gallery at the Rubenstein Arts Center (2nd floor, room #235).

A wine reception for the opening of the exhibit will be held outside room #235, from 5pm-7pm on October 4, 2024.


[PDF flyer] [Facebook Event]

Screen/Society screenings are free and open to the public.

Parking Info:  https://artscenter.duke.edu/parking

COVID-19 Info: https://cinematicarts.duke.edu/covid-19-information
 

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Contact: Hank Okazaki

Email: hokazak@duke.edu

Sponsor: Duke Cinematic Arts