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11/05/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” won “Best Performance (Narrative Feature) Actor” at the Great Lakes Christian Film Festival 2023! Thank you for that recognition, amongst some great fellow actors! This was a great festival to attend, and it was a pleasure speaking to those in attendance about our film.

11/04/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” was recognized at the Salty Earth Film Festival this past Saturday, 11/4/23 as follows:

  • Winner – Best Director.  Salty Earth Film Festival

  • Winner – Best Cinematography.  Salty Earth Film Festival

  • Silver – Best Editing.  Salty Earth Film Festival

  • Silver – Best Drama.  Salty Earth Film Festival

  • Bronze – Best Actor.  Salty Earth Film Festival

We are very grateful for these awards and recognition! There were some amazing films this year, including, “I Can”, “Miracle at Manchester”, “Running the Bases”, “I Believe”, “ Wisher Maddox”, “Casting Stone”, and “Special Needs.” Thank you very much on behalf of the “Fly Old Bird” cast/crew…

10/22/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” is an “Official Nominee” at the Great Lakes Christian Film Festival! Categories (Best Narrative Feature, Best Director, Best Writer and Best Actor). The Great Lakes Christian Film Festival is the LARGEST faith-based film festival in New York State!

Event date: 11/4 - 11/5/2023

10/8/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” won “Best Feature Film” at Emerald Coast Film Festival 2023! Hosted in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida.

Event date: 10/7 - 10/8/2023

10/06/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” is an “Official Selection” at the Salty Earth Film Festival! Categories: (Best Drama, Best Actor, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Director). The Salty Earth Film Festival was created by Salty Earth Pictures, a non-profit organization, and is dedicated to encouraging, producing, and distributing entertainment that challenges minds, lightens hearts, and strengthens souls.

Event date: 11/2 - 11/04/2023

9/21/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” is an “Official Nominee” at the 51st annual ICVM Crown Awards in Nashville. Categories: (Best Actor in a leading role and Best Non-Theatrical Release Feature). ICVM is a community of Christians involved in bringing the message of Christ to the world through the use of media. Today ICVM is a consortium of producers and distributors making a difference in the world through visual media.

Event date: 11/19/2023

7/27/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” is an “Official Nominee” for “Best Feature Screenplay - Family Drama” at the CONTENT Film Festival and Media Summit 2023! Hosted in Capernaum Studios near Dallas, Texas.

Event date: 9/25 - 9/29/2023

7/1/2023

“Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” is an “Official Selection” at the Great Lakes Christian Film Festival! Category (Best Narrative Feature). The Great Lakes Christian Film Festival is the LARGEST faith-based film festival in New York State!

Event date: 11/4 - 11/5/2023

6/23/2023

(Sun and Paw Films, LLC) has signed a fully executed distribution agreement for “Fly Old Bird: Escape to the Ark” with BMG-Global.

BMG-Global is a distributor of family-friendly, faith-based films that encourage, inspire and spread a message of hope.

BMG has developed a global network of partnerships that have yielded strong engagement with a diverse range of audiences worldwide.

Film Festival Submissions

Dove.org Review

(Faith and Family-Focused Reviews for Today’s Media) review of “Fly Old Bird” DOVE APPROVED

This is a wonderful movie that clearly shows that sometimes the person we need for a friend is the last person we would have chosen! Alan Maki (Sidewalk Singer, Mr. What) wrote the screenplay and stars as Jon Koski, the man who is slowly losing his memory. Shaun Maki directs the film, and he plays Jon’s son, Kameron. Miller Gibbs is played by Dennis McComas, the man who enters Jon’s life, and brings some stability to the sometimes-volatile Koski.

The film opens with Jon sitting on his porch and he’s very unhappy with his adult kids, Kameron and daughter Katherine. He feels like they are taking all his freedom away. He is ranting and raving to himself when Miller Gibbs spots him and comes over to see if he’s okay and if he can help. Jon wants no interference from Gibbs but Gibbs is a Christian and he cares, seeing that Jon is obviously very upset. He helps calm Jon down (a bit) and then leaves. Later, their paths cross again and Gibbs invites Jon into his home for a glass of water. Jon notices that Gibbs is very neat, with everything being orderly and in its place in his home.

Gibbs winds up offering Jon lemonade. We see the battle of the mind that Jon is dealing with when he asks for a half glass of lemonade. When Gibbs hands him the glass, half full, Jon wants to know why he didn’t fill it up. Jon spots Gibbs’ Bible and asks, “What are you? A Bible thumper too?” Despite the tension-filled beginning, and their strained banter back and forth, it soon becomes apparent that the two give one another something they each need. For Jon, it’s stability and concern, and for Gibbs it’s someone to talk to and a potential friend to ease his loneliness. We learn that Jon’s wife died some years before, and Gibbs once loved a girl who suffered an accident and died. He said she was his soulmate and he never married.

Gibbs also gives Jon the freedom he needs. Gibbs wants to visit the Ark Encounter in Kentucky which is on his bucket list. Jon offers to drive him to see the full-sized replica, and soon they are off, headed from Michigan to Kentucky. You can count on it not being your usual travel adventure.

At one stop Gibbs goes into a shop and buys a Bible for Jon. Jon is not sure he wants this birthday present, but he does recognize his friend’s kindness. We learn later that although it is summer, Jon’s birthday is actually not until December!

This movie’s script is well crafted, giving us a story in which the two main characters grow. We also learn that, despite being wary of his two adult children, Kameron and Katherine care more than Jon initially realized.

The humor is placed in some nice spots. After drinking the lemonade that Gibbs offered him, Jon thanks him for the “coffee.” In another funny scene, when they are beginning their trip to Kentucky, Gibbs goes to the trunk of the car to get something, and Jon keeps pulling just ahead of him so he can’t get to the trunk. Jon is like a teenager having fun with Gibbs and it plays humorously in the movie. In another funny moment, Jon, who is still becoming familiar with the Bible that Gibbs gave him, reads Matthew 11:28 about coming to Jesus for rest. Jon then quotes it to a pastor but inverts it and says it’s in Matthew 28:11!

The Christian worldview is very much a part of this film. Gibbs is patient with Jon and his grumpy disposition and his memory loss. Gibbs is quick to mention God and the Bible to Jon in various situations. And, without plot spoiling, Jon goes through an impressive change by the conclusion of the film. It was also good to see a young man named Kyle who shows Christian charity to Jon. There are a few uses of words like “crap” and “heck” and it was nice to see a film without the use of profanity. Jon does something at the end of the film that could be considered committing a crime, but he definitely does it for the right reasons (and it’s for his friend, Gibbs.) This unlikely friendship becomes a treasure to both Jon and Gibbs. The movie has a few interesting twists, including something that the audience learns about Jon’s Alzheimer’s.

This film has earned our Dove seal for Ages 12+. This inspiring film is solidly acted, features a well-crafted plot, and shiningly shows that God places people in our lives to bring out the best in us.