This was supposed to be a blog about film and building the new infrastructure for what truly could be called independent film.
Month: January 2009
Evolution Of Technology
True, true this is another commercial. We have a complicated relationship with commercials in The Bowl.
We’ve been trying to keep track of what films are really ready for this new version of Sundance (you know, the one that no longer is a sales market). Variety has The Greatest up (hat tip: Filmmaker):
I love these posters from Anterepo Design Industry. They tell it like it is. Brand integration? Delivery system? One Big Sell All The F’n Time?
Hat tip: Transbuddha
30. Some of the major specialized distributors recognize the need to build film education and appreciation into their job description. Focus Features “Film In Focus” website, in partnership with Faber & Faber, demonstrates this impulse beautifully. Independent, Specialized, Art, Foreign, and Truly Free Film all need an audience who acts out of choice not impulse. They need to remain review driven despite the loss of so many critics nationwide. They need to be able to recognize what qualities make a film better or unique. They need to recognize what makes a film art. They need reading that helps their love of cinema grow.
31. The need for digital preservation of indie films and their history is slowly being recognized. Granted this is a little hard to document, but I have had a handful of conversations this year with organizations contemplating both the preservation of specific films and of filmmakers’ archives. In this digital age, preservation is all the more difficult due to the lack of physical copies. Additionally the technology changes, and what was stored on form of drive is not compatible with another. Blogs are born daily and evolve so quickly, we are left wondering how to chart their progress.
32. Communities are renovating their historic town center theaters and turning them into community centers, with capabilities of film and/or digital projection. The great old movie theaters are the shrines to the first century of cinema, and a truly wonderful way to see a film.. Organizations like the League Of Historic American Theaters and the Theatre Historical Society Of America which are dedicated to the restoration and operation of these palaces. Often situated on the old main streets of many American cities, the restoration can often be the cornerstone for the revitalization of the old downtowns. But apart from being great for the local municipalities, for filmmakers these palaces are the antithesis of small screen viewing experience that most seem to think has become the defining indie experience – they are places of worship.
33. Theater owners and managers recognize the need to make the community vested in their success. I have heard of theaters giving back Monday nights to different community groups to program and in doing so building loyal audiences. Michael Moore’s Traverse City theater has 25 cent admissions for childrens’ matinees and Wednesday classics – investing in the youth and education of their community. New and best practices are developing and the theater community is sharing it’s knowledge.
Why I Love John Waters
I am working on my list of heroes, and John Waters is on it. I read his book Shock Value before I actually saw any of his films. It opened up my mind as to what I might be able to do in film. When I moved to New York, I pursued a job at New Line Cinema. This was before Nightmare On Elm Street; I knew them as the home of Pink Flamingos. I got a gig inspecting their 16mm. prints and just getting to share an elevator with John and witness that mustache live gave me enough hope to get through the next year.