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Anything You Want To Be was one of the earliest and most popular films of the early Women's Movement. This classic film about a teenager’s humorous collision with sex-role stereotypes was one of the first to explore the external pressures and the more subtle, internal pressures a girl faces in finding her identity. In a series of comical vignettes, a bright high school girl finds that, despite her parents' assurance that she can be "anything she wants to be," she is repeatedly foiled by social expectations and media stereotypes. Anything You Want To Be is one of New Day’s founding films.
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Liane Brandon
Liane Brandon is an award winning independent filmmaker, photographer and University of Massachusetts/Amherst Professor Emeritus. She was one of the first independent women filmmakers to emerge from Boston in the early Women's Movement. During that time, she was also a member of Newsreel film collective and of Bread and Roses, one of the first women's liberation groups in Boston. She was also a founding member of FilmWomen of Boston and Boston Film/Video Foundation. In 1971, she co-founded New Day Films with Julia Reichert, Jim Klein and Amalie Rothschild.
Her classic films Anything You Want To Be (1971) and Betty Tells Her Story(1972) were among the earliest and most frequently used consciousness raising tools of the Women's Movement. Her films, which also include: Once Upon A Choice, How To Prevent A Nuclear War and Fine Print have won numerous national and international awards, and have been featured on Home Box Office, The Learning Channel, USA Cable and Cinemax. They have twice received Blue Ribbons at the American Film Festival, and have been presented at the Museum of Modern Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Chicago Art Institute. Betty Tells Her Story was nominated for inclusion in the National Film Registry and was featured at the Library of Congress' Mary Pickford Theater in Washington, D.C.
Brandon is the recipient of the Boston Society of Film Critics Award and the Distinguished Alumni Award from Boston University. She has served as a juror for the Emmy Awards, the Evvy Awards, the student Academy Awards and as an education consultant for WGBH -TV.
In 2008, she was awarded grants from The Women's Film Preservation Fund to preserve Anything You Want To Be and Betty Tells Her Story.
In addition to her role as Professor at the University of Massachusetts, she was the Director of UMass Educational Television which produced award winning, original educational programming for cable/home audiences throughout New England.
Currently working as a still photographer, her photography credits include: Murder at Harvard (PBS American Experience), Typhoid Mary: The Most Dangerous Woman In America (PBS Nova), Unsolved Mysteries, The Powder and the Glory and Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women (PBS American Masters).
Actively involved with the rights of media artists, her lawsuit (Brandon v. The Regents of the University of California) won a landmark victory for filmmakers' protection of their titles.
Before becoming a filmmaker, Liane experimented with several short careers, working as a ski instructor, high school teacher and professional stunt woman.
ANPO: Art X War
ANPO: Art X War depicts resistance to the U.S. military presence in Japan by showcasing a treasure trove of art.
Subject: Asian Studies
An informed look at the individuals who made up the American Communist Party from the 1930s through the '50s. Not just a rosy remembrance, Seeing Red looks critically at the party's connection with the Soviet Union and its lack of internal democracy.
I'm Just Anneke
A family accepts their gender nonconforming child just as she is.
These Are Our Children
Saving the children of Kenya, one dream at a time.
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