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Truly Free Film

Towards A True Cross-Platform Future

Last fall at PowerToThePixel I had the good fortune to be invited to partake in a ThinkTank on transmedia.  They have recently published their report on the day and I encourage you to read it.  Special thanks for Michael Gubbins for pulling the report together and facilitating the session.

Among the observations and recommendations:

• The business models of film and other creative industries are struggling because they are trying to dictate how customers use the media

• Creative industry needs to break free of restrictive single media practices with territorial rights and release windows

• Different media platforms are not always in competition and can cross-fertilise a brand and attract new audiences

• Value is moving away from product sales towards customer engagement with a brand

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These Are Those Things

“That Was A Good Trailer”

Film Forum showed this trailer before the restored print of METROPOLIS. When it was done, the nine year old young man next to me turned to me and said “That was a good trailer”. He knows of what he speaks. And thus how little we have traveled. Fifty years is the age of Godard’s BREATHLESS and it still feels fresh even to an innocent’s eyes. And for that matter, METROPOLIS totally stood up and got the approved stamp of “exciting” from both my son and his friend.

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Truly Free Film

Some Job Opportunities In Indie Film

I spoke to the This is that interns awhile back on what opportunities I saw in the current landscape for employment in the indie sphere. We shot it so we could share it with you. I indebted to This is that former intern Chris Stetson for putting this together. Give this man a job!

We’ll have more clips from this discussion in the upcoming days and weeks.

Some Job Opportunities in Indie Film with Ted Hope (part 1) from Hope for Film on Vimeo.

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Truly Free Film

Twelve Thoughts On The Value Of Cinema

Tops on my list of “75 Problems With The Film Industry These Days” is that there is no way to justify the price point for movie tickets.  Which doesn’t mean I am opposed to paying for them — I do pay and I see it as almost a political act.  By buying movie tickets, I am voting with my dollars for the culture I want.  But I know that many people out there aren’t at all like me.  If people see the movies as just another entertainment or leisure time activity, it is very hard to justify the price. (when we compare it to other “values” – not clear on “values” not sure needed).

I do think there is a solution to this dilemma though.  We have to restore the values to film that are truly UNIQUE to film. It’s easy to say, but what does it really mean? Since cinema’s unique value has generally been neglected in most current aspects of film and its infrastructure, we are really talking about enhancing the value of cinema, of making the experience more than a movie — even if we are essentially returning to what it always has been, will be…

I recognize that there are those out there who bristle at using economic terms as a primary descriptive for an art form and a pure pleasure.  Get over it.  It’s an expensive endeavor that is difficult to deliver to a widely dispersed and ill-defined audience.  And the support system is changing and in need of great help.  Burying your head in the sand and not facing the time we are living in, is to dig the grave for the art, the business, its creators and collaborators, even for the culture overall.  Let’s find the path out of here I say.  The pain of the present exceeds the fear of the future.  But it starts with taking stock of what we’ve got.

Most filmmakers recognize the need to try to do more with their movies these days, to try to make them more of an event, or to extend their reach beyond the form into more of a cross platform experience.  That said, there is still a lot more work we can do to increase the value of the traditional cinema experience.  The steps needed to enhance the value of movies start with examining just what the core value of cinema is.  Before you can improvise, you should acknowledge the fundamentals — and we need to do that with cinema’s unique qualities.  We can take it beyond this list, but it’s a place to start.

  1. IMHO the greatest value cinema has always brought is community aka social capital.  This is not to say that this is beyond pleasure, but something that is unique to the form. Cinema is a tool to organize community. Movies help people to connect.  Can this connection — and the odds thereof — be increased?
Categories
These Are Those Things

A Favorite Film Website: Neither The Veil Nor The Four Walls

For a film not yet shot, Neither The Veil Nor The Four Walls, is a beautiful website, and one that we can be expected to be an inspiration for many other websites. It’s got a great crowdfunding mechanism, clean simple design, easy navigation, and all the critical information you want.

Somebody sent me a nice note Marian Evans sent me a nice note about it, but I forget who, but truly, thanks!

Categories
Issues and Actions

New Tax Headache For Indies

Michael Cohen thankfully tipped me off to this. It’s a headache for not just Indies but for all small businesses. It effects all filmmakers as it adds on a new layer of tax reporting for any production. According to this article, you will now need to report, via 1099, any PURCHASE you make — and intend to write off — on an individual basis. If you buy a new computer, you will have to send Apple a 1099. Time to consultant your accountant.

Categories
Issues and Actions

Don’t Let Bloomberg Reduce NYC Arts Spending

The NYTimes has reported that

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s $63 billion budget for fiscal year 2011, which starts July 1, calls for a 31 percent reduction in financing for arts groups and a 25 percent cut for libraries — steeper than any such measures he has proposed at this stage of the budget cycle in the last eight years.

You can send a letter to fight the closing of the libraries at:

http://dontclosethebook.nypl.org

I haven’t come across the same thing on the arts budget side.  If you find something, please let us know.