Categories
Bowl Of Noses

Turn Out The Lights For Climate Change!

Come March 28th maybe we should all go to bed a little earlier…

Earth Hour is a great idea.  Everyone everywhere on the planet turns off their lights at exactly the same time.  More and more people have been participating in this event each year.  It started in Sydney, Australia in 2007.  370 cities did it last year.  It’s estimated that 50 MILLION people participated in this last year.  377 cities have already signed up for this year.  
Now it’s time for you and your family to do the same!  Talk to them and see if we can all shut off our lights together.  Maybe you can even get your city to do the same.  They should have something to get schools to jump into their bowl too.
Check it out.  What a great idea.  It’s brought to you by the World Wildlife Fund.

Categories
Truly Free Film

It Could Be Getting So Much Better All The Time #11: Throw Away The Rule Book!

Chris Monger, screenwriter, director, artist had this to answer my plea:

I started a reply which turned into a rant which morphed into my history of why Indie Film did not start, but died with sex lies and videotape – and that’s even before I’d started on why Indie Film should also forget the form of the 90 minute theatrical feature. The future is here, we are free to try anything. 
And that’s the conclusion I was working towards: There’s nothing to save. 
We can’t hang on to what was (and what was often totally imperfect) anymore than we can hang on to newspapers. Regular Film / Studio Film / Indie Film as we know them may limp along for a while, or may even exist like Opera for a long time, but stories / moving images are not going away.

Now’s the time to have fun with them. In the late 60’s early 70’s a lot of Indie Filmmakers (and I’m talking about people who processed their own film, ran their own printers – really Indie!) believed that film was at the same point that painting was at the turn of the 20th Century: Rather than being ruined by photography, painting was liberated into all the isms of the new way of seeing and looking and re-presenting.

So I say, where are the Picassos and Matisses, the people who will throw away the rule book?

Categories
Bowl Of Noses

Save The World! Join The Team! Take The Challenge!

Carbonrally is a website that provides simple actions you and your family (or class) can take to save energy and slow global warming.  They’ve got them set up so you work as a team with people from all over the world.  And each action is a challenge that you can track and see how people working together can make a really big impact.  Everyone wins!

One of the many great things about being young is that we live in a time of many great challenges.  Working together, every day you can do something to make the world a better place in the future!
Categories
Truly Free Film

Maybe It Shouldn’t All Be Free

I find the current debate regarding micro-payments for print journalism fascinating.  Each morning, I work to talk myself out of a panic that we will soon be deprived of all the great newspapers, writers, and journalists.  A friend chimed in that after the papers fall then next up is the free internet.  The line of dominos is really easy to imagine. 

But maybe it shouldn’t all be free.  I, like all my film friends, are looking for a model of survival, no longer success.  Reading Steve Brill’s defense of micro-payments makes me wonder if there is anything that film fans and workers are really committed to paying for.  Variety & Hollywood Reporter start to feel like real luxuries these days.  Guilds and unions, like membership in IFP and Film Independent, are crucial in the same way that if you want a vaccine to work, virtually everyone has to partake — but my son still screams with every shot (maybe if vaccines had a networking attribute like these organizations my son would respond better…). 
But what will we pay for?  My Netflix subscription seems like a better value with each new film that is available for streaming, even if I still prefer DVDs.  As they just hit 10 Million subscribers it seems that everyone will pay for access to every film.  As a devourer of new international film, I need a festival diet of projected new work from around the world every two or three months.  It’s one of the reasons I can never leave NY.  Jaman may offer it online but I need to see it large in a room full of people.  And as much as I like to see it, I like to talk about it, read about it.  So what will I pay for?  I honestly don’t know.
Anyway, read Brill’s suggestion, and ponder the applicability to our world of film.  I am.
Categories
These Are Those Things

Perhaps The Greatest (In Their Own Special Way)

Wow.  1965.  Germany.  Four American GI’s shave the tops of their heads and give in to that delicious beat.  The first punk band?

I once played these guys for my friend Anthony and we fought to the near death on whether they were a past or present band.  In the end I think neither of us were right as that clearly they were time travelers.
By the way, I knew they were from ’65.  Thanks for the tip Rob!
Categories
Issues and Actions

Chilling Effects Clearinghouse

I just got tipped to this via MentalEclectic‘s tweet:

Chilling Effects Clearinghouse is 
a joint project of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, University of San Francisco, University of Maine, George Washington School of Law, and Santa Clara University School of Law clinics.

Do you know your online rights? Have you received a letter asking you to remove information from a Web site or to stop engaging in an activity? Are you concerned about liability for information that someone else posted to your online forum? If so, this site is for you.

Chilling Effects aims to help you understand the protections that the First Amendment and intellectual property laws give to your online activities. We are excited about the new opportunities the Internet offers individuals to express their views, parody politicians, celebrate their favorite movie stars, or criticize businesses. But we’ve noticed that not everyone feels the same way. Anecdotal evidence suggests that some individuals and corporations are using intellectual property and other laws to silence other online users. Chilling Effects encourages respect for intellectual property law, while frowning on its misuse to “chill” legitimate activity.

The website offers background material and explanations of the law for people whose websites deal with topics such as Fan Fiction, Copyright, Domain Names and Trademarks, Anonymous Speech, and Defamation.

In addition, we want your help. We are gathering a searchable database of Cease and Desist notices sent to Internet users like you. We invite you to input Cease and Desist letters that you’ve received into our database, to document the chill. We will respond by linking the legalese in the letters to FAQs that explain the allegations in plain English.

Categories
Truly Free Film

Jon Jost Responds To Jeff Lipsky

Jon Jost, longtime true indie filmmaker of great talent, innovation, and commitment, commented on Jeff’s recent post.  We bump it up in hopes that no one misses it (and next time, Jon, please send me an email address or something so I check in with you!):

As a, oh shall we say somewhat experienced filmmaker in this regard, I think much of the above makes for a delicious meal of red herring.

There are as many truly awful films that were tightly scripted, etc., and Lipsky’s assertion that scripting is some path to betterment is folly.

There are also many truly awful films that were improvised.

So what might one learn from this? Maybe that it is not whether something is scripted or not, but whether all the aspects of a work – the underlying “idea” of it, the imagery, the sound, the acting (assuming there are acting figures, which itself is a fat assumption about what a film is – there’s many stunningly wonderful abstract works with no actors) which all combine to make a film work or not. Maybe one should learn to open one’s thought processes a bit, and think and feel a bit more clearly, and not jump to rather simple-minded views.

On a personal level I can pass along that of my own work, while each was rooted in some fundamental idea or structural framework, my films
CHAMELEON (1978); SLOW MOVES (1983); BELL DIAMOND (1985); REMBRANDT LAUGHING (1987); SURE FIRE (1989-90); ALL THE VERMEERS IN NEW YORK (1989-2000); UNO A TE (1995); all shot in film, were completely improvised – though frankly most people looking at them would assume they’d been fully scripted and thought out before hand, but they were not. VERMEERS had not one page of script or dialog,nor did any of the others listed above. What they did have, in the broadest sense of the term is “direction” and craft skills and an overarching cinematic sensibility guiding them.

Subsequently, the narrative digital films OUI NON (1996-2000), HOMECOMING (2004), OVER HERE (2006) and the most recent PARABLE (2008) were all similarly utterly without script.

It is true – sort of – that digital media, drastically bringing down the costs of actual shooting, enhances the opportunities to improvise and take risks. My shooting ratios are higher, though not by much, than they were in film (in film averaged about 2.5 to 1; though some films were virtually 1 to 1); I suspect now I average in narrative work something like 3.5 to one. I am not interested in wading through piles of crap to find a film in it. Some people are and some very good films have been made that way.

So the real matter is not whether one improvises or scripts, but rather how one goes about orchestrating the totality of what makes a film. Digital enhances this by letting people shoot, fall on their faces, make total crap AND LEARN IN PROCESS, rather than sitting around waiting for $2 million or whatever to materialize so they can go replicate a script and make another cookie-cutter film, however well or badly. And, for those few who seem to actually be willing to deal with it, digital also offers a far richer and more complex palette of aesthetic possibilities, though frankly most of our younger filmmakers treat it as if it was just cheaper film and don’t begin to touch what it really is.

My two bits – a friend of mine in Stanberry MO, filmmaker Blake Eckard, pointed me to this item. Thanks Buck.

Jon Jost
www.jon-jost.com
www.jonjost.wordpress.com