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Sunday, November 29, 2009
FILMMAKER GETS A FACE LIFT 

If you've reached the blog through our home page, you will have probably noticed that Filmmakermagazine.com has received a face lift. Gone is the checkerboard of boxes and in its place is a front-page carousel and three-column design that hopefully directs you to our content a lot better. On the home page you'll now find "The Guide," in which we point you to interesting things to read, stream or hyperlink to. There are also links to our most popular content of the month as well as regularly updated Editors' Picks of content we don't want you to overlook. And, of course, there are our Web Exclusives, Director Interviews, Load and Play and original Filmmaker Videos. We've also added a long overdue blogroll with links to some of our favorite colleagues and a box pulling in our Twitter feed.

Thanks to webmaster Michael Medaglia and Managing Editor Jason Guerrasio who spearheaded this upgrade. And please let us know your thoughts. This isn't a formal 2.0 — more like a 1.5 — so we're interested in hearing what works for you, what doesn't, and what design and organization suggestions you have to make this site a better place to visit. Feel free to comment below.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/29/2009 11:30:00 PM Comments (4)


Saturday, November 28, 2009
ARTHOUSE CINEMA AS A SPECTATOR SPORT 


As we head into the quarter finals, it's Italy, Russian, Germany, India, China, Iran, Africa and Japan... all competing in the Auteurs World Cup 2009. Combining two of the world's favorite spectator sports — soccer and arthouse cinema — the good folks at The Auteurs have come up with a fun competition that focuses attention on regions as well as films. It doesn't cost anything to participate, but you have to have seen the films. So, use this opportunity to see Chantal Akerman's Toute une Nuit, Tarkovsky's The Mirror, Bunuel's Los Olvidados, or Moshen Makhmalbaf's A Moment of Innocence.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/28/2009 11:16:00 AM Comments (0)


CALLING ALL SUNDANCE FILMMAKERS 

The Sundance selection will be announced this week, and we'll have it posted here on the blog as soon as it's released. If you are a filmmaker lucky enough to get in, please keep us at Filmmaker informed of all of your publicity and distribution outreach efforts. Many if not most of you will have publicists, and they will be in direct touch with us. But for those of you doing other things in addition to or perhaps instead of conventional publicity, let us know. Particularly, links to Twitter feeds, blogs, RSS updates, etc. are appreciated. As in previous years we'll be building a standalone Sundance page and will make an effort to feature filmmaker-generated content. And, if you are using Sundance to launch not only your film but its own DIY distribution, definitely reach out to us so we can both cover and publicize your efforts.

You can always email me at editor.filmmakermagazine AT gmail.com, and, of course, you can also post responses in the comments thread below.

Update: I have a Google Wave account and have been trying to figure out how to get more engaged with it. It struck me that a collaborative thread in which filmmakers share their strategy and marketing ideas, discuss their promo materials, link back to their own publicity efforts could be a cool one. Having been a producer on nine Sundance films, I'll definitely have my own two — our four — cents to throw into the mix. So, let me know if you are Park City bound and on the service. I'm at: scottmacaulay AT googlewave.com. And, if you are not on Google Wave but are sincerely interested in contributing, have a Sundance film, and feel like you have the time to tackle the learning curve, email me and perhaps I can get you an invite.

2nd Update: I've added a new "Park City 2010" category to the Forums with a Sundance section, Slamdance section, and general Park City section. In the first two, you can post info about your own films traveling to the festivals or just inquire and speculate about films there. In the last, you can share info about your trip to Park City, including posted notices of condo shares, housing needed, ride shares, etc.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/28/2009 11:04:00 AM Comments (6)


Thursday, November 26, 2009
HAPPY THANKSGIVING! 

From all of us at Filmmaker, Happy Thanksgiving to all of our readers. Hope everyone has a great holiday. The blog will be back over the weekend and next week with the Gotham Awards, the Sundance Selection, the beginnings of our Decade End surveys, and more...


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/26/2009 10:54:00 AM Comments (1)


Tuesday, November 24, 2009
JOANA VICENTE NAMED INTERIM IFP HEAD 

As the search for a new IFP executive director continues, indie film producer Joana Vicente (who with her husband Jason Kliot have made independent movies with their labels, Open City Films, Blow Up Pictures and HDNet Films) has been named the interim head of the non-profit organization according to a release sent out today.

Vicente, who is a member of the committee looking for a new head of the IFP, will join IFP next week to work on the transition with Michelle Byrd, who has lead the organization for the last 12 years and announced her departure back in June.

The IFP is the publisher of Filmmaker Magazine.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/24/2009 02:39:00 PM Comments (0)


GIVING AWAY NORTH BY NORTHWEST 


Ask me my favorite Hitchcock film and I'll shoot you back the obvious answer: Vertigo, the director's cinematic and fetishistic embodiment of romantic obsession. Ask me the film I'd be most likely to pop into my DVD player and re-watch for fun and I've another obvious answer: North by Northwest, his smart and stylish paranoid thriller, which he made the following year. And while Vertigo inspired a whole rash of erotic thrillers in the '90s — Basic Instinct and all its imitators — North by Northwest's sly take on the American security stake feels perfectly of the moment.

The good folks at Warner Bros. Home Video have offered three copies of the new North by Northwest 50th Anniversary Special Edition to DVD to Filmmaker readers. Available in Blu-Ray and DVD, the disk contains two new documentaries: "The Master’s Touch: Hitchcock’s Signature Style" consists of interviews, clips, and behind-the-scenes footage discussing the key elements of Hitchcock's filmmaking. In "North by Northwest: One for the Ages," directors Guillermo del Toro, William Friedkin, Curtis Hanson, and Francis Lawrence share their interpretations on the film’s importance and its influence on their own work. The Blu-ray Book also contains 44 pages full of photos, film facts and ‘insider information.

North by Northwest is newly remastered in 1080p from the original VistaVision elements. From the press release:

The arrival of North by Northwest on Blu-ray is a landmark event in home video history, as it marks the very first of the famed director’s films to become available on this state-of-the-art format. Accordingly, the film has received a meticulous restoration and remastering especially for this occasion with Warner Bros. Motion Picture Imaging scanning the original VistaVision production elements in 8K resolution. The resulting presentation reveals a depth of field and clarity never before possible, only serving to heighten every thrill-packed moment of this beloved classic.

Starring Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint, James Mason, co-starring Jessie Royce Landis, Leo G. Carroll and Martin Landau, the stylish, action-packed espionage caper was written by Ernest Lehman, with music by Bernard Herrmann. Nominated for three Academy Awards® including Best Writing, Film Editing and Art Direction, the film was lauded as #4 on AFI's ”100 Years…100 Thrills” and selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.


I'm not going to come up with a brainteaser for the question. Any fan will have no problem with this one:

North by Northwest contains a chase sequence that is considered one of the best in movie history. What is Cary Grant chased by?

Email your answers to me at editor.filmmakermagazine AT gmail.com, and the first three correct respondents will win the DVD (the standard def version) of this classic tale of mistaken identity and Cold War paranoia.

UPDATE: We have our winners! Congrats, all.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/24/2009 09:00:00 AM Comments (0)


Sunday, November 22, 2009
4 SHORTS ARE FOURPLAY 


Filmmaker Kyle Henry was one of our "25 New Faces" in 2006 on the basis of his excellent debut feature, Room, and now he's blogging about his fascinating follow-up, Fourplay. Executive produced by Jim McKay and Michael Stipe, and produced by Jason Wehling, Fourplay is a series of short films highlighting sexual transgressions, and, as the blog makes clear, the final product may be compiled into a feature, released as a series of shorts, or may be part of some other, more fluid kind of format.

From the description of the film on the blog:

Four transgressions, four transmissions, four true tales of sexual intimacy: in AUSTIN, a young heterosexual couple debate independence vs conceiving and arrive at a startling compromise; in TAMPA, a man finds his own private nirvana in a public restroom; in WEST HAVEN, an older woman falls for her pastor’s dog; and in SAN FRANCISCO, a transvestite prostitute faces a challenging assignment.

These are emotionally high stakes stories that require bravura performances and we are doing all this on a very small budget. Hope we are up the task! Also, by making a series of shorts, we don't know what the final form will be, or if there will be a final form versus a series of forms (e.g. stand alone shorts serially released on VOD, a narrative feature packaged for festival/theatrical/cable/DVD distribution, or an add on for free to a progressive sex-ed websites like Nightcharm or Jane's Guide or Butt Magazine). Who knows?


And:

We are interested in telling stories where sex functions as it does in our real lives: as potentially major/minor turning point/s in not only the relationships we create through the acts themselves but also in our understanding of ourselves and the world around us through committing these acts.


Or, as Henry wrote to me in an email, the film and its byproduct, the blog, "give voice to real-life visionaries like Chloe, whose knowledge of life (and sexual intimacy, not just sex) is gained through real living and not just its recreation through cinematic simulations."

Start by checking out this introductory post and then move on to its more recent and very interesting content, including interviews with the actors, who include Gary Chason (Dear Pillow) and Chloe, a professional transvestite sex worker, in which they discuss the intersections (or not) between their lives and their characters.

Note: the blog is NSFW, and you have to assure Google you are over 18 to view.

(Pictured above: Fourplay actor Paul Soileau.)


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/22/2009 07:34:00 PM Comments (0)


COLUMBIA ANNOUNCES NEW FOCUS IN CREATIVE PRODUCING 

A few weeks ago I attended a reception at Ira Deutchman's house in which Columbia University's new Focus in Creative Producing was announced, and I've been remiss in posting here about what is a really promising and, in these times, necessary course of study up on Morningside Heights.

From the press release:

Building upon a strong record of faculty and alumni recognition at the Oscars, Sundance and other film festivals, Columbia University School of the Arts is expanding its master of fine arts film program. Film: Creative Producing, a newly introduced course of study, will train the next generation of filmmakers in the modern complexities of professional movie production.

Applications for the three-year MFA program are being accepted now. The deadline for the fall 2010 semester is December 1.

“A strong and gifted group of producers has come from Columbia, including Albert Berger (Little Miss Sunshine) to Ben Odell (Padre Nuestro) to current student Bridgette Liebowitz, producer of the acclaimed student short Cigarette Candy,” said Jamal Joseph, associate professor and chair of the film department. “Our new program will build on the success of our unique approach that immerses students in the creative, business, history and practical aspects of producing.”

Unlike other film producing programs, students will take a completely integrated core curriculum in their first year, including courses in directing, directing actors, screenwriting and film history. In these courses they will connect with students pursuing a focus in directing and screenwriting. The cross-disciplinary approach is designed to emphasize aspiring producers’ knowledge of all aspects of the film making process. The small size of the producing program — 24 students — will ensure individual attention from faculty and encourage the development of a close-knit community of students.

In the second year, the program offers a broad curriculum that is defined by Columbia’s presence in the New York independent filmmaking community, but is comprehensive in its scope. It includes instruction in the nuts and bolts of producing, but is steeped in Columbia’s traditional emphasis on storytelling as an art form. The expanded focus will also cross over into producing for related art forms, such as theater and the fast-growing area of new media studies.

Students in the program study with professors like Maureen Ryan, co-producer of Man on Wire; James Schamus, CEO of Focus Features and producer of Brokeback Mountain; Ira Deutchman, CEO of Emerging Pictures; and other prominent producers such as Richard Brick, Michael Hausman and Anthony Bregman. Columbia faculty and alumni were associated with 12 Oscar nominations at the 81st Annual Academy Awards, and two winners. Thirty seven Columbia filmmakers were involved with 28 films and shorts screened at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival.


Filmmaker readers will also note the large number of "25 New Face" filmmakers who have hailed from Columbia, including John Magary, Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt, Fellipe Barbosa, Hope Dickson Leach and Moon Molson.

One of the impressive things about the new program is how it's taken note of current imperatives within the indie community — principally, the need for producers to be versed in new 21st century modes of audience development and to assume a marketing and distribution role for their films — and embedded them within the curriculum. "Columbia’s Producing Program embraces the independent model," Deutchman told me, "and as such will be dealing directly with issues of distribution in a difficult environment. We’ll be incorporating DIY and other alternative distribution methods into the curriculum, and making new financing and distribution models into an emphasis for research."

We'll be interested in hearing how the curriculum develops and will report back. And, in the meantime, please note that this year's application deadline is December 1.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/22/2009 05:36:00 PM Comments (4)


DOUG RUSHKOFF ON PEER TO PEER VALUE CREATION AND CURRENCY 

I came across this short video of Doug Rushkoff speaking at the Web 2.0 Expo, and in it he echoes some of the things he spoke about at the DIY Days in Philadelphia, which I attended back in June. In that keynote as well Rushkoff hopskotched through the creation of central currency, detailing the role of governments in controlling the our ability to exchange value. It's a lot to cover in 12.5 minutes, and while I'm no expert in economic history, there's plenty to quibble with in his broad shorthand. Like, as a colleague pointed out after his Philadelphia lecture, didn't the creation of currency also have something to do with the fact that people didn't want to carry around big bushels of grain around everywhere? This video also has its share of head-scratchers, like his statements that today, "cash has lost its utility value" and "cash is scarce" (perhaps correct for many on an individual level but certainly not correct on a macro level).

In the last four minutes of this video, however, Rushkoff takes some useful shots at the "free" movement as well as what he sees as the wrong conclusions about creative property rights many have derived from the open source movement. (Funny how, after all the hype, Chris Anderson's Free landed with something of a thud...) He is correct in his pinpointing of how value is being drained from content creators and displaced towards the proprietors of ad-based networks (i.e., Google), and his description of Anderson's model as being about the constant and ultimately unsustainable leveraging of forms of free content or services is succinct and apt. With two-and-a-half minutes to go, Rushkoff reaches the reason I decided to watch the video: a discussion of alternate forms of currency to facilitate creative value exchange. Of course, the idea of local currency or script, actually being practiced in some communities, has surfaced recently in discussions about local solutions to the current economic crisis, and the idea of peer-to-peer value exchange led in the past to the creation of sites ranging from Craig's List to Swaptree.

I'd recommend skipping to the end to catch this section, in which Rushkoff talks about "real competition to a Google universe and their economy of 'faux open-ness" and new sites like Time Dollars, Itex, and, particularly, Super Fluid. He concludes: "If web cubed leads to aggregators and indexes, then genuine peer-to-peer will lead to bottom-up value creation. I don't think this next era in the internet is about scaling up anymore. I think it is about figuring out how to exchange value rather than extract value."

The question, then: what other forms of currency would provide value to filmmakers and what types of communities would need to form in order to make these alternative currencies viable?


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/22/2009 12:35:00 PM Comments (1)


Friday, November 20, 2009
BEST FILM NOT PLAYING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU @MOMA THIS WEEKEND 

Contributing Editor Brandon Harris has posted on his blog a new preview of Filmmaker and MoMA's annual "Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You" program, which unspools at the museum this week. Screening will be the five films that will be competing for the Gotham Award we sponsor on December 1. (For schedule and film descriptions, visit MoMA's site.)

Brandon writes that this year's program is the strongest we've put together in the six years of doing this series, and I agree. This isn't to say that previous years haven't been strong, but in the past we've always been able to indulge ourselves with some element of whimsicality in the selection process, including films that would truly be offbeat pictures in a theatrical context. This year, however, we have five films that all play great on the big screen and all herald important new talents. That these films don't have broader distribution is shocking.

Ry Russo-Young's You Won't Miss Me, starring Stella Schnabel, is a hypnotic film collage taking us into the inner life of a fascinating yet tough-to-like downtown actress. Russo-Young made the film in bits and pieces over a period of months, and it contains a lovely, unforced mixture of emotions, from happiness to despair, anxiety to abandon. Read Alicia Van Couvering's interview with the director here.

October Country is our lone doc. (One other strong doc was in contention up until the end but withdrew when it finalized distribution plans.) Like Russo-Young, filmmakers Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher (chosen this year for our "25 New Faces") have made a film that seems to burrow under the psychic skin of its characters. A portrait of Mosher's own splintered upstate New York family, October Country impresses with the mysterious visual language it creates to connect its lost fathers, sons, mothers and daughters.

First-time filmmaker Damien Chazelle's Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench is an unexpected charmer, a film that will delight fans of street-level indie filmmaking as well as those who love music and movies about music. When I wrote about it for the blog, I referenced Once, and despite the film's more stringent formal ambitions, I don't think I'm that far off. Read the rest of what I wrote here.

San Francisco-based d.p. Frazier Bradshaw makes his feature debut with Everything Strange and New, and this was the film that was a discovery for many of us on the panel. Bradshaw's is an experimental portrait of a stultifying marriage seen through the eyes of its construction worker husband, who struggles to make ends meet while wondering what he's lost by accepting more commitment in his life. It's an American indie that seems especially attuned to the economic anxieties rippling through the nation right now.

Finally, Tariq Tapa's Zero Bridge is an astonishing debut, made by the director (another "25 New Face") out of his backpack (literally) in the Indian-occupied city of Srinagar, Kashmir. The neorealist tale tells the story of a teenage pickpocket, Dilawar, who plans to escape from both Kashmir and his strict uncle but whose plans are complicated when he forms a bond with a woman whose passport he has stolen. The film tells a human story while remaining attuned to the geo-political realities of the region, and it demonstrates the global ambitions of much current American independent film.

Members of our editorial staff are hosting the Q and A's (I'll be there Saturday afternoon and evening) so please stop by, see one or more of these movies, and then say hello.

Watch this preview of the series.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/20/2009 09:44:00 PM Comments (0)


Thursday, November 19, 2009
THIS WAS MTV IN THE '90s 

It didn't used to be all reality shows. In 1990 MTV aired Buzz, an experimental video art collage show by director Mark Pellington. Genesis P-Orridge, William Burroughs, RU Sirius, David Byrne, and other transgressive thinkers (oh yes, and Jon Bon Jovi) were all featured in the debut show, which was openly inspired by Bruce Conner and other experimental filmmakers. Boing Boing noticed that the first episode has been been posted to YouTube, and I've embedded the clips below.






# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/19/2009 06:53:00 PM Comments (3)


Wednesday, November 18, 2009
OSCAR DOC SHORTLIST: THE COVE & FOOD, INC. IN; TYSON & CAPITALISM OUT 

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have announced the 15 films that have made the shortlist for Best Documentary. Two of the most prised docs of the year made the list: Louie Psihoyos's The Cove and Robert Kenner's Food, Inc., as well as a few lesser known titles like Anders Ostergaard's Burma VJ and Matt Tyrnauer's Valentino: The Last Emperor. But surprisingly excluded were Michael Moore's Capitalism: A Love Story and James Toback's Tyson.

The 82nd Academy Awards nominations will be announced on February 2.


Best Documentary Shortlist:

The Beaches of Agnes
Agnes Varda, director

Burma VJ
Anders Ostergaard, director

The Cove
Louie Psihoyos, director

Every Little Step
James D. Stern and Adam Del Deo, directors

Facing Ali
Pete McCormack, director

Food, Inc.
Robert Kenner, director

Garbage Dreams
Mai Iskander, director

Living in Emergency: Stories of Doctors Without Borders
Mark N. Hopkins, director

The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers
Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith, directors

Mugabe and the White African
Andrew Thompson and Lucy Bailey, directors

Sergio
Greg Barker, director

Soundtrack for a Revolution
Bill Guttentag and Dan Sturman, directors

Under Our Skin
Andy Abrahams Wilson, director

Valentino: The Last Emperor
Matt Tyrnauer, director

Which Way Home
Rebecca Cammisa, director


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/18/2009 11:42:00 PM Comments (1)


READY TO RECord 



The Sundance Institute announced today the 13 artists selected for the New Frontier section at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. These works will be shown at New Frontier on Main, open to the public Thursday, January 21 through Saturday, January 30, 2010. (The full list of artists are below.)

One of the artists chosen this year is actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt (pictured), who we discovered last year has an interest in the new media/digital artists on the Web as he's created the site hitRECord.org. In the Spring 2009 issue we talked to him about the site, which at the time was still not fully realized he admitted, but his goal is to have the site be a home where filmmakers, artists, poets, musicians, ect. can start or contribute to works (or what he calls "remix" works) in a supportive community with the final project owned by the community. "This is my whole take on the Internet creative culture," Gordon-Levitt says in the piece. "Why would you take time out to be negative? Instead of posting something that’s negative I’d rather move on and look for something good. Everyone [who comes to the site] understands this and has built a positive community." He continues: "What is good about hitRECord is that you don’t have to confront that blank page. I see what’s getting a lot of hearts (the way works are rated on the site), I add something to it and reupload it. The idea is if lots of people do that we’ll get a collective refining of our records. It’s not about an individual author; it’s the desires of what I hope will be hundreds of refinements."

According to the release, Gordon-Levitt plans on "creating a cohesive short multimedia work that will have a special screening at the end of the Festival."

Click here to learn more about the site.


2010 New Frontier Artists:

Artist Spotlight

Gina Czarnecki
“Nascent,” “Cell Mass N2,” “Infected”
Multimedia artist, Gina Czarnecki, explores the convergence of biology, sensuality, dance, and the cinematic in her mesmerizing single channel installations. Developed in collaboration with biotechnologists, computer programmers, dancers, and sound artists, Czarnecki crafts gorgeous, digital meditations on the human form in motion, gazing across scale, blurring the boundaries between the mass and the cellular, and investigating what is possible when nature ends and the technologically manipulated begins. Czarnecki’s works have been exhibited throughout the world. Czarnecki currently lives and works in Liverpool, UK. For additional information on this artist go here: http://www.ginaczarnecki.com/

Petko Dourmana
“Post Global Warming Survival Kit”
Petko Dourmana’s fascinating interactive multimedia installation invites audiences to explore a post apocalyptic landscape and visit the workplace of a person whose job it is to observe the border between land and the rising sea. Upon entering the room, viewers at first think there is nothing in it but an old caravan. However, once they alter their ability to see through the darkness with night vision devices, viewers can experience and explore the hauntingly futuristic landscape surrounding them. For additional information on this piece go here: http://www.dourmana.com/node/5

Petko Dourmana is a media artist based in Sofia, Bulgaria. As a founder and chairman of InterSpace Association since 1998 Dourmana has been involved in production and co-production of art events and projects with Bulgarian and international artists and activists. Additional Information on the artist can be found here: http://www.dourmana.com/

Thomas Glaeser and Jens Franke
“The Earthwalk”
Attention Google Earth Junkies! Digital media designers Thomas Glaeser and Jens Franke invite you to surf the globe with your feet! Their installation, THE EARTHWALK, offers an intuitive way of controlling Google Earth by letting the user navigate the earth’s surface by stepping onto a map projected on the floor. Fly around the world in one minute or descend upon they city of your choice and become immersed in your favorite tangle of streets. THE EARTHWALK lets you soar and explore the planet, one step at a time. To see a video of the piece go here: http://bit.ly/3p31Zd

Jens Franke is a German based user interface designer currently working at Intuity Media Lab GmbH. Thomas Glaeser specializes in research and conception in the field of interface and interaction design. He is currently a managing partner of Envis Precisely.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt
“hitRECord.org”
Part media workshop, part social network, and part art exhibition, hitRECord.org is a hybrid production enterprise that taps crowd sourced creativity and topples traditional ideas of artistic ownership, online communication, and art production. Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s (“500 Days of Summer,” “Mysterious Skin,” “Brick”) invites audiences to collectively collaborate with him in the filmmaking process, and create, record, and remix each other’s art (video, music, photos, writing, etc.) with the goal of creating cohesive short multimedia work that will have a special screening at the end of the Festival. To learn more about hitRECord go to: http://hitrecord.org/

Eric Gradman
“Cloud Mirror”
Artist and computer scientist, Eric Gradman brings online social networking back into the human realm with, Cloud Mirror, an interactive augmented reality art installation that merges audiences with their online identities. Step in front of the magic mirror and you will see yourself in the flesh. You will also see your “second skin” - a thought bubble with information from your Facebook, Twitter, and other social network identities. Anyone who has properly registered can participate in this playful and insightful work which aims to bring online intimacy back into human interaction. To see a video of the piece go here: http://www.exothermia.net/monkeys_and_robots/

Gradman recently graduated from the University of Southern California with his Masters in Computer Science. He currently lives and works in the greater Los Angeles area.

Michael Joaquin Grey
“Various Titles”
Computational artist Michael Joaquin Grey creates “objects” out of film. Orbiting planets pulse with the beat of Miles Davis; the classic film, The Wizard of Oz, throbs and spins around its own axis; the impossible life/death cycle of cartoon characters take the shape of morphing slime molds; and a cinematic Escher’s knot articulates the continuum between teen sex and pregnancy. Beautiful, elegant, and fascinating to watch, Grey’s artwork exists at the boundaries of art, science, and media and contemplates the origins of life, language, and physical form.

For the past twenty years, Michael Joaquin Grey has been creating work that extends and plays with the boundaries of art, science, and media. Most recently he has been exploring computational cinema and choreography with sound, motion and video. Additional information on this artist can be found here: www.citroid.com/. Images of Grey’s work can be found here: http://www.bitforms.com/michael-joaquin-grey-gallery.html.

Ragnar Kjartansson
“The End”
A soulful siren song lures the viewer to attend a magical surround sound concert performed from five different locations in the Canadian Rockies. Icelandic musician and performance artist, Ragnar Kjartansson’s mesmerizing 5-channel installation is a portal to another time and place, transporting the viewer to a sweeping expanse of alpine landscape where just two musicians, Ragnar & Davio Por Jonsson fill the crisp snowy air with an entire ensemble band of electric and acoustic guitars, banjos, drums, and a grand piano. To see a video of the installation go here: http://bit.ly/3gQD4h.

Ragnar Kjartansson graduated from the Icelandic Academy of arts in 2001. His work spans durational performance, theatre, painting, video, and music. Kjartansson has been in numerous solo and group exhibitions throughout the world. For additional information on the artist go here: http://this.is/rassi/

Matthew Moore
“Lifecycles”
As a fourth-generation Arizona farmer whose land is currently being encroached upon by suburban sprawl, Matthew Moore designs his installations to reconnect consumers to their local geographies and the life cycles of the Earth and its produce. Lifecycles is a multimedia installation that reconfigures the produce section of a Park City grocery store and transforms the experience of shopping for vegetables into a beautiful meditation that brings us closer to the lifecycles of the produce we buy and consume.

Moore grew up working on his family’s farm in Waddell, Arizona. Moore’s artwork grew out of his background in farming. Moore says, “As a farmer and an artist, I display the realities of the trials and tribulations of American agriculture, its roles in contemporary globalization, and its questionable ecological practices create a foundation for my explorations.” To see more of Moore’s artwork go to: www.urbanplough.com

Pipilotti Rist
“Lobe of Lung: The Saliva Ooze Away To The Underground”
The deviously delicious imagination of internationally renowned multimedia artist Pipilotti Rist invites audiences to lie back and lounge inside her film. Lobe of the Lung is a fully immersive installation rendition of her debut feature film Pepperminta, which is being screened in New Frontier’s film program. Starring two humans, a pig, and an earthworm, Lobe of the Lung merges fantasy with reality as it opens up the walls of New Frontier onto a luscious panoramic poem that bathes audiences in audiovisual delight.

Pipilotti Rist was born in 1962 in Grabs, Switzerland. Rist’s works have been exhibited widely at museums and festivals throughout the world. Rist currently lives and works in Zurich, Switzerland. Additional Information on the artist, and links to her gallery and feature film can be found here: http://www.pipilottirist.net/

Tracey Snelling
“Bordertown”
Snelling’s exquisitely crafted miniature sculptures of buildings and landscapes conjure a visceral sense of time and place and emanate a life that comes from within. Incorporating architecture, photography, collage, film, and audio, Snelling presents a carnivalesque tableau of the Mexican/American border that tells the story of a sweeping locale and of the individual inhabitants residing inside the buildings, streets, and alleyways. The cinematic image stands in for real life and it unspools behind windowpanes, conjuring a sublime sense of both wonder and nostalgia. Snelling currently lives and works in Oakland, CA. Additional Information on the artist can be found here: http://traceysnelling.com/portfolio.html

Performances

Nao Bustamante
“Silver and Gold”
Filmmaker and performance artist Nao Bustamante returns to Sundance with a deliciously outrageous and ambitious new work; her short film Untitled #1 (from the series Earth People 2507), starring her toy poodle as a herd of buffalo, appeared at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. Silver & Gold combines film, live performance, and original costumes into a self-proclaimed “filmformance” that evokes the muse of legendary filmmaker Jack Smith and his tribute to 1940s’ Dominican movie starlet Maria Montez in a magical and joyfully twisted exploration of race, glamour, sexuality, and the silver screen.

Nao Bustamante’s work encompasses performance art, sculpture, installation, and video. Her work has been shown throughout the world. Bustamante lives and works in New York. She is Assistant Professor of New Media and Live Art at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. For additional information on the artist go to: www.naobustamante.com

Kalup Linzy
“Sweet, Sampled, and Left Ova”
Kalup Linzy’s work is a splendid mix of southern culture, daytime soap opera, and the raunchy, shady humor of black gay culture, all turbocharged with fierce DIY Network determination. Linzy writes, directs, and stars in his hilariously melodramatic tales of love and flama. Following the video presentation, one of the characters, Taiwan, comes to life to star in a multimedia musical performance. Featuring the videos, Ride to da Club, Conversations wit de Churen VII: Lil Myron’s Trade, and episodes from the series Melody Set Me Free.

Kalup Linzy is a video and performance artist currently living and working in Brooklyn, NY who has performed the world over. To see Linzy’s Youtube station, Da Churen and Company, visit: http://www.youtube.com/user/kklinzy


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/18/2009 12:53:00 PM Comments (0)


THINGS TO DO IN DENVER WHEN YOU'RE DEAD 

The mountain came to Mohamed.

I picked up a bug that lingered and made me miserable. But I had accepted the honor of being a juror for the Kieslowski Prize at the 31st Starz Denver Film Festival, which began last week and runs through November 22. Only six foreign-language films were competing for our votes, and, either at other festivals or through the kindness of European sales agents, I had seen them all. (The prize is sponsored by Screen, for which I am a reviewer.) Something told me I should cover myself as a journalist just in case I didn’t heal in time, since I had promised to cover the event. So I made a list of films I hadn’t seen (many I had viewed at other fests) that seemed of particular interest and asked for screeners, which I received. In fact, I watched most of them on my laptop in the hospital.

Ultimately, I didn’t make it to Colorado. We did our jury deliberation over the phone (winner announced this weekend, sorry). And I am keeping my word about writing on the festival—without attending. Which begs the question, why go to festivals, especially ones with few or no premieres, unless you live in that city and it’s your only shot at seeing the stuff that’s being packed and repacked in film cans and sent all over the world that year?

That’s a big topic, but I want to make clear that the reason I offered to write something is that, once I saw the festival’s website, I realized this fest is a huge cut above the usual regional festival (even if such bland regional films as Donal Mosher and Michael Palmieri’s October Country, Bill Ross and Turner Ross’s 45365, and Hue Rhodes’s Saint John of Las Vegas did little to enhance the genre), with provocative programming, useful panels, and career awards given for talent—Ed Harris, avant-gardist Ernie Gehr, Hal Holbrook, and J.K. Simmons--rather than for generating media buzz. It is greener than any other festival I know, and it is the only one to my knowledge with an “animation station.” They do have a red carpet, but I doubt anyone there takes it too seriously.

More than that, I know Denver well enough to have expected a sizable Latin American selection (it has a large Mexican community), but I was shocked to find that so many of the best films were from the East (Eastern Europe, the Near East, the Middle East). I’m not sure of the reasons (and why the Kieslowski Prize there?), but who cares? Few worthwhile films from Western Europe and from the U.S. indie scene were in the mix, though you might have expected otherwise.

It’s gratifying to know that an audience in a city of Denver's size not only attends the eastern movies, they go year-round to the seven-screen Starz Film Center to view alternative cinema. (I do hope the docs they show during the year are a cut above the interesting but formless, tv-like ones screened during the festival, like William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe, by the leftist lawyer’s daughters Emily Kunstler and Sarah Kunstler; American Faust: From Condi to Neo-Condi, by British documentarian Sebastian Doggart; and Barbara Brancaccio and Joshua Zeman’s limp Cropsey, about a series of murders on Staten Island.) After all, don’t we like to think that such relatively esoteric fare is appreciated only on the coasts? I don’t know them, but the programmers there cast a wide net and are open to what many middle Americans would find…strange. And you thought the host town of the 2008 Democratic Convention was merely an isolated case of urban sprawl that ends with the Rocky Mountains.

The finest of the Spanish-language films are from Mexico, as you might expect. That all involve the financial underpinnings of survival comes as no surprise, but all classes—and levels of desperation--are covered. Rigoberto Perezcano’s Northless is a very accomplished debut. A young man, Andres, with a family in Oaxaca arrives in Tijuana with the intent of sneaking into the U.S. to work and send money back home. Perezcano does something clever here while Andres stops in Tijuana and works in a small family store. The narrative could have just bypassed that period but instead Perezcano studies the dynamics of Mexicans in roughly the same boat, sensitive people whose lives are on hold either because they are waiting to cross, or they are hoping, mostly in vain, that a loved one who made it over will return for them. This is a lovely, poignant film that accepts the sociological constraints hovering over its characters, nice people who have a zest for life but no assurance what it might bring them day to day.

In The Tree, by Carlos Serrano Azcona, Santiago lacks Andres’s firm goal. He is a Mexican slacker in Madrid, just out of a badly failed marriage, unemployed, aimless. He moves with the speed of a slug. This quiet masterpiece valorizes the quotidian in all our lives, no matter how trivial it may seem to others. It is part of our own personal paths toward something: in Santiago’s case, salvation.

Ariel Gordon's Black Box is more sophisticated. Its characters are from higher classes, tied up in big business, which implies corruption and dirty tricks. A slick con man whose bio is presented through animation and step printing hires a businessman to kill the president. He knows the man has a family and a terminal disease, and convinces him that his wife and children will be cared for. The desperate man accepts, quits, accepts, quits: He wants to have his cake and eat it, too. The con man is experienced, he knows all the tricks, but still, something about their sparring gets to him and the two bond and recognize their similarities.

Not that the region didn’t provide it’s share of clunkers as well. The worst film I’ve ever seen is Alberto Cortes’s Heart of Time, a déjà vu propaganda piece out of Chiapas wrapped in a trite love story.

Except for Andrea Arnold’s Loachian Fish Tank, from Scotland, and Dutch director Esther Rots’s surprisingly effective psychological thriller Can Go Through Skin, the western European fare was unimpressive. So many festivals showcase them to a fault, this is not a cardinal sin; in fact, it’s refreshing. But Noud Heerkens’s Dutch movie Last Conversation, its main idea of a single character driving and speaking stolen from Kiarostami, is as much a fraud as a bore. And Italian screenwriter-turned-filmmaker Gianni di Grigorio’s fluffy Mid-August Lunch, about a middle-aged man stuck preparing a big dinner for some lovable old ladies, begs for you to adore it, even if it has RAI television written over every frame.

At the other extreme is Film Ist. A Girl & a Gun, Austrian director Gustav Deutsch’s forced collection of archival footage to make some vague point about sex and death in early cinema. Playing a burnt-out actress with heavy psychological baggage, the great Danish actress Paprika Steen nearly saves Martin Pieter Zandvliet’s lazy Applause, which would evaporate without her presence. And the French master Andre Techine is represented by The Girl on the Train, a beautifully made if overscripted story about a non-Jewish teen who pretends she has been mistaken for a Jew and is the victim of a hate crime.

Things get so much better the further east we go. Marek Najbrt’s Protector, from the Czech Republic, is a revelation. Frantic film noir is the appropriate style for this ‘40s-set movie centered on a married couple whose happiness is marred by the politics of the Nazi occupation. She is a Jewish actress, and her fortunes slide; he is a well-known non-Jewish radio personality whose latent opportunism serves him well under new masters. The structuring absence is the assassination of Heydrich, but it is way in the background, the better to foreground the main characters and some of their unusual acquaintances, each of whom has a different way of coping with the new leadership.

Andrey Khrzhanovsky is a Russian animator who fuses live action, animation, and doc footage in the lovely nostalgic piece A Room and a Half, or a Sentimental Journey to the Homeland. The film’s conceit is that poet Joseph Brodsky makes a trip back to the Soviet Union after his expulsion, something that never happened, but which provides Khrzhanovsky an opportunity to observe life there over several decades through the eyes of Brodsky. The only child clearly adored his parents, and like all Russians, he adored Mother Russia.

A Man Who Ate His Cherries, by Iranian filmmaker Payman Haghani—we’re still east--is one of the discoveries of the festival. Like many good Iranian films today, it tells of an individual’s persistence in the face of adversity. Reza is a worker who must pay back his wife’s dowry in a nasty divorce settlement but hasn’t the money. He is being milked, but is stuck, and tries every possible avenue to resolve the dilemma. But there is no solution, especially in this society in which lots of laws and customs make little sense. He resorts to a dangerous scam to get the funds. The film is beautifully shot, and we fully identify with Reza by movie’s end.

A special mention: Damien Chazelle’s American indie film Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench premiered at Tribeca. I’m not sure why it wasn’t in Sundance: This is the finest U.S. indie movie of the past year. Shot in black and white in Boston and New York, it is cinema as music, both in topic and in form, a blend of classical Hollywood musical, New Wave homage to the Hollywood musical, beatnik movie, city symphony film, and handheld camera verite—all colored by a Cassavetes-like sensibility. Some characters sing their parts: It’s ballsy, but it works. The narrative isn’t heavy, it’s more like…jazz, or blues, the three main characters living life as best they can and rolling with the punches. Justin Hurwitz’s score is exceptional, and lead Jason Palmer plays a mean trumpet.

-- Howard Feinstein


# posted by Howard Feinstein @ 11/18/2009 01:30:00 AM Comments (2)


Tuesday, November 17, 2009
TWO TAKEAWAYS FROM JON REISS @ THE IFC CENTER 


Thanks to everyone who came out tonight for the first in our series, "A New World: A User's Guide for Filmmakers and Audiences" at the IFC Center. The speaker was Jon Reiss, who gave listeners an accelerated yet detailed overview of his thoughts on DIY distribution and what a theatrical release means today. (Some of these thoughts can be found in this article in Filmmaker.)

There was a lot to take away, but here are a couple of things that impressed themselves on me.

1. During the development of your project, think of five specific audiences your film will appeal to. Jon said that too many people think of their audiences too broadly, like, "I think my film will appeal to women between the ages of 25 to 45." That's a demographic, not an audience. You have to be a lot more specific because that specificity is what enables you to tap into a niche audience that will mobilize itself around your film. Jon said that Valentino director Matt Tyrnauer was surprised to discover that women's sewing groups were buying blocks of tickets for his doc on the great fashion designer.

The trick, then, becomes not just identifying those niches early on but — and this is my addition — developing your film so that these potential niches are motivated to rally around it. This doesn't mean pandering to an audience — it means making sure that you present your subject matters in fresh, original, and deep ways so as to inspire those naturally predisposed to them.

2. Prioritize among the four goals for a feature filmmaker. Jon discussed the four things a filmmaker might hope to get from their film. The first is furthering of his or her career. This could come in the form of a development deal, an agent, a studio assignment, financing of a second film, etc. The second is money. The third is to get your film seen, to communicate and reach people. The fourth is to change the world, or to advance a particular social or political message. (He also spun out two or three others, including becoming famous, developing a long-term fan base and demonstrating green practices.) What was interesting to me was his simple declaration that all of these goals could not be aspired towards in the same proportions. A filmmaker has to clearly prioritize which of these is most important to him or her and guide his expectations accordingly.

Jon's book, Think Outside the Box (Office), has just been released, and you can buy it from him with a special 12% discount courtesy of Filmmaker by clicking on the link below.

To Order Think Outside the Box Office with 12% Off and Bonus Gifts - Click Here!


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/17/2009 10:05:00 PM Comments (0)


JON REISS AT THE IFC CENTER TONIGHT 



After a great week of discussions on our Weekly Player forum, Jon Reiss will be at the IFC Center tonight in NYC to conduct our first in a series of events at the Center on new, digital-era ways of financing, distributing, marketing and building an audience for independent films. Reiss's seminar will teach how to create unique distribution and marketing plans for independent films. He will also be selling copies of his new book Think Outside the Box (Office): The Ultimate Guide to Film Distribution and Marketing in the Digital Era.

Over at indieWIRE today the site has published a speech Reiss gave recently at at the CPH:DOX Forum in Copenhagen on new distribution methods.

Click here to purchase tickets to the event.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/17/2009 02:26:00 PM Comments (0)


FILMMAKER/APPLE PRESENTS MEET THE FILMMAKER: JOHN HILLCOAT 



Tonight at 7pm we will continue our Meet The Filmmaker series at the Apple Store in SoHo (103 Prince St) with a discussion with The Road director John Hillcoat. Based on the Cormac McCarthy best-selling novel, the film stars Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee as a father and son trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic world.

For the Fall 2008 issue we were granted an exclusive visit to Hillcoat's edit room to talk to him as he put the finishing touches on the film. “The material doesn‘t shy away from the worst aspects of humanity, yet what‘s unusual about it is that it also has a sentimental love story at the heart of it, in a world that‘s dark and brutal although believable,” says Hillcoat about the film. “It‘s tricky, but it‘s real and that‘s why we decided to shoot it on location. The book had a real immediacy about it in that this is exactly how people would behave.” Read more here.

Event is open to the public.

The Weinstein Company opens The Road Nov. 25.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/17/2009 09:00:00 AM Comments (0)


Sunday, November 15, 2009
I CAN DIE NOW 

Forget the Oscars, as a producer, I can die now. (You need to watch both clips, and the first one especially to the end.)




Original Video- More videos at TinyPic

Seriously, when Harmony Korine forwarded me these links, I thought they were great and couldn't stop laughing. And then I thought about what we producers go through when trying to obtain music for our films. I can't remember how much we paid for the music rights for the Roy Orbison version of the Patsy Cline song "Crying" that closes out Gummo, but I'm sure it was a lot less than we'd be charged for it today now that licensors have jacked up their rates to compensate for declining record sales. I think it can be safely said, though, that the song's inclusion in Gummo 12 years ago has just paid off for the publishers with an unexpected dividend that's far beyond that license fee.

Licensors, see — it pays off to put your music in indie films.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/15/2009 04:44:00 PM Comments (5)


Sunday, November 08, 2009
JON REISS ON OUR FORUMS, AT THE IFC CENTER AND (MAYBE) FREE IN YOUR MAILBOX 


We inaugurate our “Weekly Player” series with filmmaker Jon Reiss (Bomb It), who will be on the forums all this week (November 9 - 16) answering your questions about DIY distribution, marketing, publicity and outreach. Jon is the author the new book, Think Outside the Box (Office): The Ultimate Guide to Film Distribution and Marketing for the Digital Era, and readers will know him from the great series of articles he’s written for us — “My Adventure in Theatrical Self-Distribution," “My Adventure in Home Video," and “How to Market Your DVD Online." These articles grew into the book, which I've read and think is an indispensable manual for filmmakers figuring out how to launch their works in today’s new digital world.

So, if you aren’t a member yet of the Filmmaker Forums, I hope you become one this week and post your questions for Jon at the Weekly Player forum. It’s free, of course. As an incentive, we’ll be giving away five copies of Jon’s book to the originating posters of what we judge to be the five best threads.

Finally, Jon will also be the speaker at part one of our series at the IFC Center, “The New World: A User’s Guide for Filmmakers and Audiences.” In this special series, experts on the new, digital-era ways of financing, distributing, marketing and building an audience for independent film will relay their hard-earned practical advice and strategies. Learn how the industry is shifting and providing fresh opportunities for films and audiences to connect in new ways. Technology is changing all the rules — we’ll track the new revenue sources being created for filmmakers and help audiences navigate the expanding options.
Jon’s seminar, which takes place Tuesday, November 17 at 6:00PM, will teach how to create unique distribution and marketing plans for independent films, explaining both do-it-yourself and hybrid approaches. He will outline what filmmakers need to do to prepare for distribution while making their films. Finally he will details ways in which filmmakers can take back and redefine the theatrical release by playing a combination of conventional theaters, community screenings and festivals. Admission is only $12.50, and tickets can be bought here.

One more thing: if, hanging out on the forums you decide you’d like Jon’s book, he’s offering a $5 discount coupon at his site.

Hope to see some of you online this week and in person next week at the IFC Center.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/08/2009 07:40:00 PM Comments (0)


Friday, November 06, 2009
ARE YOU OBJECTIFIED? 



2ND UPDATE: We have our winners. Thanks, all!

UPDATE: To win a digital copy of Objectified, answer the question below and email editor.filmmakermagazine AT gmail.com.

Almost three years ago I decided to check out what seemed to be an obscure little documentary about graphic design at SXSW and was surprised to find the line to get in stretching all the way down the length of the convention hall. As the editor of a magazine, the subject matter of Gary Hustwit’s Helvetica — an examination of the historical, communicative and ideological meanings of that ubiquitous typeface — interested me. I hadn’t realized that SXSW, which is full of filmmakers, musicians and web designers who all have Adobe InDesign loaded on their laptops, contained a huge ready-made audience for Hustwit’s smart and engaging take on contemporary graphic design.

This past year at SXSW, Hustwit returned with what he revealed during the pre-screening intro as the second in a series of design-themed movies, Objectified. The new film looks at the world of industrial design, which translates into the people who make the things that are the props of our lives. As the film points out, everything from a potato peeler to a chair to a faucet to a sports car to an iPod is designed, and that fusion of aesthetics and functionality contains an assumption about not only our relationship to the objects that surround us but our concepts of our own identities as well. In Objectified, Hustwit talks with a number of people who make stuff but, as with Helvetica, his aim is not to create a dry history of industrial design. Instead, Hustwit takes us on a rhetorical journey that ends with a series of discussions questioning the logic of object production in an environmentally-taxed, wasteful, and over-marketed consumer society. What makes Objectified work, and what elevates it over the quite-good Helvetica, is the progression of its discourse. Yes, the objects in this film, perfectly lit and shot against stark white backgrounds, are dutifully fetishized — Apple ads come to life — but the documentary makes its greatest impact as it moves from issues surrounding object production to questions of why objects should be made at all. As 3D printers prepare to do to the object-making industries what filesharing has done to the content businesses, Objectified is an affectionate dissection of our urge to love ourselves through what we can hold, handle, use, and buy.

Objectified is now available in a variety of formats, including Blu-Ray, a limited edition DVD, and a limited edition USB. (Check the website for more details.) It's also available in non-physical form on iTunes, and the good folks at New Video have provided Filmmaker with three digital copies for our readers. Here are the details. You have to be a U.S. resident. And, you have to have an iTunes account or, if you win, set one up. Oh yeah — to make this just a tiny, tiny bit less easy, you have to answer a question: what object inspires Steven Heller, co-chair of the Design Program at the School of Visual Arts and author of the "Visuals" column of the New York Times Book Review? (Hint: you might check out Hustwit's "Objectify Me" blog...) The first three people who email me at editor.filmmakermagazine AT gmail.com will receive a free iTunes download of Objectified.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/06/2009 10:00:00 AM Comments (0)


FILMMAKER/APPLE PRESENTS MEET THE FILMMAKER: JASON REITMAN 



Tonight at 7pm head over to the NYC Apple Store in SoHo (103 Prince Street) for what's sure to be a lively and entertaining conversation with director Jason Reitman. He'll be talking about his latest film Up in the Air starring George Clooney as a corporate downsizer whose life of collecting frequent flyer miles, perks and no-strings-attached hookups is in jeopardy. Interviewing Reitman for the Fall issue, Scott Macaulay writes: "One of the most astonishing things about Up in the Air is the clear eye it casts on 2009 America and a workforce undergoing the shock treatment of recession, outsourcing and the creative destruction of so many of our traditional industries.... Reitman refuses to go for stock Hollywood uplift with a last line and image that's among the most resonant cinematic closers I can remember." Be sure to get a free copy of the Fall issue at the event to read the rest of the interview.

The event is open to the public.

Paramount opens Up in the Air Dec. 25.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/06/2009 09:00:00 AM Comments (0)


Wednesday, November 04, 2009
THE FONT OF ANGER 

Aaron Leming, who works as a specialist at the Southlake Town Square Apple Store in Dallas, created this resonant typographic rendition of Paddy Chayefsky's famous Howard Beale "Mad as Hell" speech from Network.

Mad As Hell! Kinetic Typography from Aaron Leming on Vimeo.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/04/2009 11:46:00 PM Comments (1)


A CHANGING OF THE GUARD AT OUR DIRECTOR INTERVIEWS COLUMN 

Back in March, 2007, with his talk with Color Me Kubrick's Brian Cook, Nick Dawson inaugurated a new column here at Filmmakermagazine.com: the Director Interviews. Over the course of two-and-a-half years, he infallibly spun out thoughtful and provocative discussions with directors ranging from emerging American indies to big-name international auteurs to everyone in between. Viewing the bulk of each week's releases before honing in on one person to speak with, Dawson brought dedication, scholarship and personality to a column that was always, first and foremost, simply a great read.

Earlier this year Dawson published his first book, Being Hal Ashby: Life of a Hollywood Rebel, a rigorously researched, page-turning biography of the iconic director that is highly recommended, and now he's stepping down from the column to pursue other work and family projects. We thank Nick for his great work establishing this column and look forward to his frequent, we hope, future contributions to the pages of Filmmaker Magazine.

With this week's interview with Collapse's Chris Smith, the Director Interviews is handed over to two great writers and critics whose names will be familiar to our readers: Brandon Harris and Damon Smith. Brandon, of course, is one of our Contributing Editors and has his own blog, Cinema Echo Chamber. He's also an active writer/director and producer whose first feature I hope to see shooting sometime soon. Smith is a writer whose work has appeared in not only Filmmaker but Time Out New York, Senses of Cinema, the Boston Phoenix, Bright Lights Film Journal, and Filmcatcher. Welcome, Brandon and Damon!

Below: Chris Smith's Collapse mashed-up with Roland Emmerich's 2012.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/04/2009 07:57:00 PM Comments (0)


SCHOOL'S OUT: ASTRA TAYLOR ON THE UNSCHOOLED LIFE 

Filmmaker Astra Taylor (Examined Life) gave the debut Artist Talk for the Walker Art Center's "Raising Creative Kids" series. The series is described as an initiative "designed to make the Walker a destination and resource for families and parents wanting to creatively engage their children."

Here's their description of the talk:

Raised by independent-thinking bohemian parents, Taylor was unschooled until age 13. Join the filmmaker as she shares her personal experiences of growing up home-schooled without a curriculum or schedule, and how it has shaped her educational philosophy and development as an artist.


And, it is embedded below:


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 11/04/2009 07:20:00 PM Comments (0)


SUNDANCE BRINGS 2010 FESTIVAL TO A CITY NEAR YOU 

The Sundance Institute announced today the creation of Sundance Film Festival U.S.A. where direct-from-festival films from the upcoming 2010 festival will be screened nationwide in theaters in eight cities on the Thursday of the festival (Jan. 28). This will conincide with events and premiere screenings back at the festival, including the North American premiere of the socio-political documentary The Shock Doctrine, from directors Michael Winterbottom and Mat Whitecross. The Sundance Film Festival runs January 21-31, 2010.

From the release:
On January 28, eight filmmakers and their films will be dispatched from Park City to cities across America, for the first time providing audiences the opportunity to experience screenings direct from the Festival in their home town art houses and to engage in live conversation with Festival artists. An introduction video featuring Robert Redford and highlights from the Festival will precede the screenings. Selections for films and filmmakers traveling to the eight cities will take place shortly after the programming announcement in December. All films will be selected from the official Sundance Film Festival program. Tickets will be available through each theatre’s individual box office. Southwest Airlines is the official airline partner of Sundance Film Festival U.S.A.

The participating cities and theaters are:
Ann Arbor, MI -- Michigan Theater
Brookline, MA -- Coolidge Corner Theatre
Brooklyn, NY -- BAM
Chicago, IL -- Music Box Theatre
Los Angeles, CA -- Downtown Independent
Madison, WI -- Sundance Cinemas Madison
Nashville, TN -- The Belcourt Theatre
San Francisco, CA -- Sundance Kabuki Cinemas


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/04/2009 01:21:00 PM Comments (1)


Tuesday, November 03, 2009
GONE BUT NEVER FORGOTTEN 

Before the tragic sudden death of John Hughes this past summer four filmmakers from Toronto -- Michael Facciolo (producer) , Kari Hollend (producer), Lenny Panzer (co-creator) and Matt Austin Sadowski (director) -- spent four years making a tribute documentary about the reclusive director, nabbing interviews with some of the main actors from his films (Andrew McCarthy, Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson to name a few), directors who have been influenced by his iconic work (Kevin Smith and Jason Reitman) and traveling to Illinois last year to find Hughes.

After Hughes's death the project suddenly became a hot commodity and got a worldwide deal with Alliance Films which released the film, Don't You Forget About Me, on DVD today. Learn more about the film here. It's available at Best Buy, Walmart, iTunes, Blockbuster and other stores.

Seeing the trailer below, it looks like it's a must see for any Hughes fan.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/03/2009 07:12:00 PM Comments (1)


Monday, November 02, 2009
HOW THEY DID IT: ISN'T SHE?... 

Or I should say, how he did it.

Here, Jamie Stuart breaks down the visual effects and tweaks he did for his short, Isn't She?..., through Final Cut Studio and Photoshop.













Watch Isn't She?...
Read parts 1 & 2 of Jamie's review of Final Cut Studio.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/02/2009 12:10:00 PM Comments (2)


Sunday, November 01, 2009
PLAY THAT FUNKY MUSIC 



If you've read the latest issue (or run into me recently) you know that I dig the blaxploitation spoof, Black Dynamite. From its straight face acting to the way it was shot, director Scott Sanders (aka Suckapunch) and star Michael Jai White have created an impressive comedy that aesthetically holds up to most of the real blaxploitations of the 70s and puts a shot in the arm of the recently watered down spoof genre.

But one of Dynamite's greatest aspects is its music. The film's editor, Adrian Younge, created the original score through the use of instruments and analog recording equipment from the era the film is based in. He explains how he did this in a sidebar to our Black Dynamite feature in the Fall issue. But below is a promo of the soundtrack's release through the indie magazine/record label Wax Poetics which touches on how Younge created the sound. You can buy the score and soundtrack on their site. Black Dynamite is currently playing in theaters.


# posted by Jason Guerrasio @ 11/01/2009 03:06:00 PM Comments (0)



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ON THIS PAGE

FILMMAKER GETS A FACE LIFT
ARTHOUSE CINEMA AS A SPECTATOR SPORT
CALLING ALL SUNDANCE FILMMAKERS
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
JOANA VICENTE NAMED INTERIM IFP HEAD
GIVING AWAY NORTH BY NORTHWEST
4 SHORTS ARE FOURPLAY
COLUMBIA ANNOUNCES NEW FOCUS IN CREATIVE PRODUCING
DOUG RUSHKOFF ON PEER TO PEER VALUE CREATION AND CURRENCY
BEST FILM NOT PLAYING AT A THEATER NEAR YOU @MOMA THIS WEEKEND
THIS WAS MTV IN THE '90s
OSCAR DOC SHORTLIST: THE COVE & FOOD, INC. IN; TYSON & CAPITALISM OUT
READY TO RECord
THINGS TO DO IN DENVER WHEN YOU'RE DEAD
TWO TAKEAWAYS FROM JON REISS @ THE IFC CENTER
JON REISS AT THE IFC CENTER TONIGHT
FILMMAKER/APPLE PRESENTS MEET THE FILMMAKER: JOHN HILLCOAT
I CAN DIE NOW
JON REISS ON OUR FORUMS, AT THE IFC CENTER AND (MAYBE) FREE IN YOUR MAILBOX
ARE YOU OBJECTIFIED?
FILMMAKER/APPLE PRESENTS MEET THE FILMMAKER: JASON REITMAN
THE FONT OF ANGER
A CHANGING OF THE GUARD AT OUR DIRECTOR INTERVIEWS COLUMN
SCHOOL'S OUT: ASTRA TAYLOR ON THE UNSCHOOLED LIFE
SUNDANCE BRINGS 2010 FESTIVAL TO A CITY NEAR YOU
GONE BUT NEVER FORGOTTEN
HOW THEY DID IT: ISN'T SHE?...
PLAY THAT FUNKY MUSIC


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