The blog for aspiring & established filmmakers of independent films. by ted hope.

Our Obligation To Share

There are so many things that we need to do in order to make independent film a sustainable and vibrant culture and industry. That said, we are in a better place to do that than ever before. For the first time in our culture, we can say that that vision is dependent on no one else other than those who participate in it. The question is whether we are up for the challenge.

This post was originally conceived for and posted — in a slightly different form — on Sundance‘s new filmmaker-to-filmmaker site Artist Services.

There is no denying that the Indie Film World has changed. In many ways, “independence” is a true option now – in every step of the
process. Yet, we certainly have a long way to go in achieving that
dream.

We all strive for quality, funding, access, distribution, marketing in
creating our films and reaching audiences with them. These aspects all keep
getting better. We have been finding answers – incredibly great
solutions – regularly as of late. But let’s be honest here: we want
more and we need it fast. Despite the improvements, the increase in
participants and the fracturing of the marketplace (two great
occurrences, in my opinion) unfortunately also make it harder to earn
a living or sustain a community than ever before. We have to do
something about it.

I have tremendous faith that both our indie film culture and community
will continue to get better – but that faith is conditional. My faith is in people, and by that, my faith is in
the extension from the individual to the general: community. My
delight and frustration come from the same source, these people, for
it is inherent for such a great and diverse group to have
disagreements: We don’t all want and need the same thing (thankfully,
again).

What I want — and what we need — from everyone is both action and a change in behavior. I love to do things, to get things done, to generate even more – we can make this world a better
place. We can improve our films. We can build our audiences and
strengthen our community.

The challenge is whether it matters enough to us, that we can invest the time to
create something truly free — beyond which we call “independent”. Sometimes I fear it doesn’t matter enough to us because we have not yet embraced the simple concepts that can get us there. Maybe we don’t want the responsibility that is required to truly own our work (figuratively and literally). Maybe it feels better to blame others (aka The System) for our inability to do better and really reach people with our work. But if it does matter and we accept the responsibility, we must embrace transparency.

Transparency does not end with data. It doesn’t even start there. Transparency begins with us. Transparency is a process, a behavior. By definition, it is an openness to share – share not only our successes,
but also our process and all it entails. It seems we have had a lot
of trouble committing to this openness.

Sharing our failures is perhaps both the greatest need and greatest
challenge. We learn more from our mistakes
than anything else. Yet throughout the two decades of this rise of
indie film that we have all enjoyed, we have allowed our failures to
vanish uncharted and unanalyzed. We have the tools to record our
failures, to share them, and to learn from them. We cannot continue
to allow this opportunity to grow to escape us. The sustainability of
our community and careers depends on it.

Transparency also requires us to share both our process and our
feelings about that process. We are not alone. As much as creativity
is often a solitary process – at least in the early stages – the
ability to get it done, discovered, appreciated and presented, is
anything but. As we have not yet mastered the art (and never will,
thankfully) of the form that represents all the Pillars Of Cinema, we
will always be frustrated — but that frustration need not stall us. If we can learn to share that frustration,
to utilize that to build hope that these challenges can be met, we
will not be demoralized. We will not feel alienated. We will
recognize and learn how to depend on our community. We have to do it.

A Truly Free Film Movement requires “direct to fan” and “direct to
artist” engagement. Communication is not a one-way flow. Nor is
communication a flow brought about via a tube from artist to fan or
vice versa. It is a flow that loops in the community, embraces it for
all it is, warts and all. It cannot, nor should it be, an echo
chamber of agreement. It is a river made up of many individuals and
many communities, full of disagreements and opposing needs. Most of
all, though, it must be characterized by this willingness to share.

Think about the world you want. Think about how you can now actually
earn a living doing what you love. Think about how you get there and
how you can sustain it. It is all more possible than ever before. I
cannot imagine that such thoughts could lead you to any other process
than one of sharing. Sharing leads to engagement – which then prompts
action. Wonder why you aren’t getting more done? Perhaps because you
aren’t sharing. Let’s make this blog benefit us all. Let’s allow it
to truly build something. It all begins with your sharing:
Contribute. Comment. Spread. Be part of something great.

I keep To Do Lists. Many of them. I will never complete them all. I
try to develop good habits that become something close to rituals. I
try to introduce the people I know to each other. I try to give new
voices the platform to inform others, and join with them in community
endeavors. I try to take the conversation further. I don’t think my
way is the only way or even the best way for others. I make it a
point to read what others write, and try to join the conversation. I
make it a point to watch new work, and have a screening series to
share it with others. To me, each of these activities is part of what
it means to be an independent filmmaker vested in his community.

Until this week, none of the independent support organizations
functioned as a true community – with a flow of communication between
all participants. These organizations, as helpful as they are,
function mostly as service and access providers, without doing all
that is necessary to foster communication. With the launch of the
Sundance Community blog we have the opportunity to truly share — or at least those that are alumni of the festival do. I have done my best to make this blog a community hub for all indie filmmakers, offering it up as a soap box for many. I am sure there are many other similar sites (and I wish I could learn of them. Please let me know if you know of them) where creators and their facilitators share common concerns and search for solutions. The question still is what are we going to do with this opportunity to communicate?

Hopefully we will have leaders, voices of authority, that can help
launch and direct conversations. Hopefully, we will have participants
that make it part of their practice to join conversations and take
them further. Someone always needs to step forward. And someone else
needs to suggest a new path. Everyone needs to find the courage to shoulder the responsibility that is
community building, for it is from that vantage point that we can see
the mountaintop that is sustainability.

I get discouraged sometimes by the time it takes to manage this blog. I get discouraged by how slow people are to participate in change, to take risks, to participate in community endeavors — even sometimes at the temporary delay of their personal goals, but I WILL MAKE THE COMMITMENT TO BE A REGULAR PARTICPANT IN THE COMMUNITY, BUT I NEED YOU TO DO THE SAME. WILL YOU PLEASE JOIN ME? Or at least continue to participate?

Every Aspiring Filmmakers new best friend.

Meet Ted

Hope offers his unique perspective on how to make movies while keeping your integrity intact and how to create a sustainable business enterprise out of that art while staying true to yourself.

Meet Ted

Ted Hope is a “holistic film producer”: he aims to be there from the beginning and then forever after, involved in every aspect of a film’s life cycle and ecosystem, as committed to engineering serendipity as preventing problems, as obsessed with lifting the good into the great, as he is…

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