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Yesterday, I
wrote an item about the filmmaker Angel
Kristi Williams’
crowd fundraising campaign for her new film project Charlotte (HEREand I mentioned her
previous short film, The Christmas Tree.

Having seen
the film before, I still find it to be a quietly powerful, poignant, yet understated film about a father spending the day with his daughter who wants
to do the right thing, yet circumstances come in the way.

Ms Williams
really has a keen eye for detail and subtle nuances, along with a great eye for locations.
This is a Chicago that you never see on films and TV, far away from the usual
North Michigan Ave or north side slickness.

The filmmaker says that her relationship with her father was the inspiration for her film:

 “When he died suddenly in 2001 I was a
freshman in college. I never really had time to grieve because life kept moving
but I knew I wanted to write something in his honor. Many years later that love
manifested itself in The Christmas Tree.”

She adds that
the film is very special to her because “at
the heart of the story is an unbreakable bond between a father and daughter but
they also have a friendship because she’s so mature.

And she further
added that it was “magical how the film came together, because:

We were one week from
production and hadn’t cast the father when my producer Mel Jones sent me an
iPhone video of Ka’ramuu Kush reading a scene. I knew he was perfect but we
were shooting in Chicago, where I was studying film, and he lived in LA. I
wasn’t sure it would happen. A day later he called me and said if you can find
a way to fly me to Chicago, I’ll do it. He flew in at 6am on the morning of
shoot day 1 and came immediately to set. Crazy how the stars align like that.

The film stars S&A Black Filmmaker Challenge winner Ka’ramuu Kush.

Take a look
for yourself: