Categories
Truly Free Film

Adam Chapnick on “IndieGoGo Films Showcased at World-Class Festivals in 2011”

Google became a verb several years ago. In the Indie / Truly Free Film space we are close to verb-izing another company. But just like all tissues are not Kleenex, there are many crowdfunding platforms out there, and it is worth not forgetting that. Find the platform that works best for your film, as there are plusses and minuses on everything.

Today Adam Chanpick speaks of the films (and some of the benefits) of crowdfunding platform IndieGoGo.

14 IndieGoGo Films Showcased at World-Class Festivals in 2011

IndieGoGo filmmakers have been rocking the world stage in 2011. In the first six months, no fewer than fifteen films that successfully campaigned on IndieGoGo appeared in the world’s leading film fests, including Sundance, SXSW, Cannes, Tribeca Film Fest, HotDocs, and LA Film Fest. These films have gone on to win top awards (Tribeca Audience Award) and get picked up by top distributors (The Weinstein Company).

In my responsibilities at IndieGoGo and Distribber, I’m regularly asked for advice and help with all facets of film finance and distribution. After answering so many of these one-off questions with the words, “lots of IndieGoGo campaigners have already figured that out,” it’s clear the filmmaker community would benefit from an update from IndieGoGo filmmakers who have had success.

As background, since 2008, the independent film community has been a central part of the IndieGoGo family; thousands of films have raised money for production, distribution, festival travel, promotion, marketing and for many other film funding needs.

IndieGoGo is partnered with leading organizations like Fractured Atlas and the San Francisco Film Society to offer filmmakers fiscal sponsorship services (Fractured Atlas campaigns recently passed $1,000,000. Sheffield Doc/Fest, one of the world’s leading documentary events, also has been an active and innovative partner.

Below is are links to all the amazing films, grouped by the festival in which they appeared. I encourage you to check out each campaign to learn more about pitch videos and copy, updates and perk selections, and how to engage an audience.

LA Film Fest

1. An Ordinary Family

2. Wish Me Away (1)
Wish Me Away (2)

3. Salaam Dunk

Cannes

4. Cerise

HotDocs

5. You’ve Been Trumped

Tribeca

6. Give Up Tomorrow (Won the audience award!)

7. The Bully Project Film (Was picked up by Weinstein Co.)

8. Love Hate Love – Tribeca Travel

SXSW

9. My Sucky Teen Romance (1)
My Sucky Teen Romance (2)

10. 8 (Award winner)

11. Sound It Out (1)
Sound It Out (2)
Sound It Out (3)

12. HAPPY NEW YEAR

Sundance

13. The High Level Bridge

14. The Rocket Boy

All of these campaigns succeeded on many levels, but there are three key areas that they nailed: They each had a great pitch, a proactive team, and each found the audience that cares about their passion and interacted with them consistently and creatively.

Over the next four days you’ll hear from four of the filmmakers behind these success stories, who’ll share key takeaways, tips, and tricks about their journey from funding to festival. I hope their learning helps your film become the next success story.

Adam Chapnick
IndieGoGo

Categories
Truly Free Film

Allow Me To Take YOU To Venice To Experience DARK HORSE

It’s pretty crazy how fast everything moves these days. We are able to leap countries and time to find what we missed continents away.

Today DARK HORSE has it’s press and industry screening in Toronto. Tomorrow is the North American Premiere. But I know how to make you feel like you are with us. Let me take you to Venice…

My flight out of Venice was evidently the only one that left for the United States on Tuesday. Our film DARK HORSE premiered there to a very nice standing ovation the night before. I arrive here to find interviews and press conference clips already up online. Check it out (and of course I rant a little bit). You even get to see the photo call and a NEW clip at the end!

Want more press conference? More Todd? There’s a bit of a spoiler in this one, although it is more philosophical spoiler than actual content.

You really should have been with us on the red carpet. I couldn’t resist photographing a smooch with my wife there, and well, “they” caught it:

Even our entrance at the screening is posted.

If it is specifics you want, here’s Selma Blair talking about working with Todd:

Jordan Gelber offers up his view of the collaboration with Mr. Solondz (6.5 min) and then Selma adds a bit more of her perspective (6 min.):

I am sure there is more to find. But I have to say there’s a particular pleasure getting to relive your pleasures moments after you’ve had them.

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These Are Those Things

We All Have To Sell Out Sometime…

Maybe my day will come. To make our art, we need someone to give us money, generally speaking. Hell, to pay for our health insurance or our kids’ education, we need some to pay for us to make some kind of art.

Even Jean Luc Godard made commercials. Here’s one he did for Schick Aftershave:

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Truly Free Film

The End Of The Auteur Era Of Film?

People like to get credit for their work, but have they been getting the right credit for it? Are we able to recognize when something is a collaboration as opposed to a work of an individual who has hired a team to execute it?

I pride myself on having produced films that could only have been the product of the unique vision of the director. That said, I have had a front row seat on how culture in general has been drifting and leaping into something more collaborative and think it just may represent the end of an era.

One of my early jobs in the film business was working as a Script Analyst for many of the NYC-based film production companies. I was always impressed by how many seemingly unique ideas were shared by many writers. There was a month way back when when I read five scripts all featuring dwarf bowling (okay, so some of the companies I read for were schlock producers, but you get the general idea). It became clear that we all harvest our information from similar sources and process it in not-so-unique manners. If all we are doing is acting as a filter, does it make sense to claim authorship still?

I was impressed with James Gunn, the director of SUPER, when he specified that “A Film By” credit would be false due to the collective efforts of all those involved. SUPER is very much “A James Gunn Movie” though, as that credit is more of a brand — if you know James Gunn, you know what you want to expect from “A James Gunn Movie”. Utilizing a brand is a much different thing than claiming authorship. Brands do help filter content for audiences. False authorship confuses things for communities everywhere.

I was similarly impressed — moved actually — when years ago I watched OUR SONG, Jim McKay’s great film following three girls growing up in Brooklyn (and Kerry Washington’s first role). In the opening credits, the “Film By” credit comes up, and then everyone who contributed to the film is credited. Nonetheless, having now recognized how unique McKay’s work is (particularly here in America), it would not have been wrong to call it “A Jim McKay Film”.

I frequently practice a form of blog writing that Bruce Sterling coined as a “Atemporality for the creative artist” (video here). The method goes a bit like this:

  • I have an idea or feeling about something, and spontaneously tweet it.
  • I witness what response the comment gets on Twitter and ponder it.
  • The comment is auto-posted to Facebook where those that it intrigues have more room to discuss it coherently.
  • I contribute on FB new thoughts on the subject that have been informed by the Twitterverse.
  • I consider all the conversations and write a post for my blog.
  • The blog goes up automatically onto the various social media sites and I see what response it gets.
  • I consider the comments (if any) that the post has and refine my ideas still further, possibly for a future tweet, update, or post.
  • With such a collaborative culture at work, it would be wrong to claim most ideas as my own, or even of a single author. I was heartened to see this recognition in Megan Garber’s Neiman Lab response to Gabler’s NYT Sunday Mag article last month “The Elusive Big Idea“. It still surprises me how much our culture and media industry wants to promote egotism. I do not believe that credit grabs motivate creative thinking and such see no logical reason to hang onto false credits. In fact, it is the false credits that most reveal both the egotism and lack of creative thinking. With only one exception, can I think of any time that a credit discussion I engaged in was warranted (even if even then what was done was counter to industry-standard). But I digress…

    Garber writes:

    “Increasingly, though, the ideas that spark progress are collective, diffusive endeavors rather than the result (to the extent they ever were) of individual inspiration. Ideas increasingly resist branding. The idea of the idea is evolving. We don’t treat Google like a Big Idea — though, of course, that’s most definitely what it is; we treat it like Google. Ditto Facebook, ditto Twitter, ditto Reddit and Wikipedia. Those new infrastructures merge idea and practice, ars and tecnica, so seamlessly that it’s easy to forget how big (and how Big) the ideas that inform them actually are. Increasingly, the ultimate upshot of the Big Idea — the changed world, the bettered world — is bypassing the idea stage altogether. As we build new tools and, with them, a new environment, blueprints are byproducts rather than guideposts. We’re playing progress, increasingly, by ear. And, in the process, we’re becoming less self-conscious about change itself — and about our role in effecting it.”

    I truly admire how this column and others like it have become community soap boxes to discuss the state of our industry and culture, to call attention to issues and options, and hopefully find some solutions. The plight of the independent filmmaker has progressed to the evolution of a truly free film community, and we are building it better together. The spirit of the collective endeavor is raging stronger every day and the results of this change of action and focus are shining brightly.

    As much as I was inspired to work in what I saw as the art form and medium that best defined contemporary existence, that inspiration came from those works of the great film auteurs. As difficult as it is to maintain this practice, I am inspired to keep pushing forward to help find some solutions by the commitment, labor, knowledge, and generosity displayed by the COMMUNITY on a general basis. Let’s keep it up and lift it up to all that this culture and industry can truly be.

    Beautiful stories will be written by gifted individuals. Our greatest movies will be helmed by unique and committed visionaries. But neither is all that our world needs or even wants these days. In this time of superabundance and open access, it is the shared endeavor of communities that give to the culture they want, share what they love, and contribute to the efforts of many, that will carry us through to a better future. We are on our way and can not shy away from the hard work ahead of us, even if we do not receive credit for it.

    Categories
    Truly Free Film

    John T Trigonis on “The Tao of Crowdfunding: Twitter Tips for Crowdfunders”

    I think you know how enthusiastic I am about all the tools and services out there to get our work done and share it with the community. We have moved from the Era of How to one of How To Do It Well. It is time to truly develop best practices.

    Luckily this blog has become a bit of a platform for the community to share what we’ve learned. We are recognizing that we can build something better together. Today, filmmaker John T. Trigonis shares what he’s learned marrying Twitter to his IndieGoGo crowdfunding campaign.

    Perhaps the most time-consuming part of any crowdfunding campaign is getting the word out about your project. Fortunately, we’re lucky to live during a time that’s made promotion as easy as sending an email or updating your Facebook status.

    Twitter, in particular, has become a powerful force in the universe of marketing your campaign because of its real time nature. The challenge, however, is to keep from succumbing to the dark side of promotion––Spamotion.

    Here are a few tips that I’ve learned through my own experiences crowdfunding my short film Cerise and by keeping a keen eye on other IndieGoGo campaigns.

    Twitter Tip #1: Be a Prologue Before a Petition
    IndieGoGo co-founder Slava Rubin says it best: “The world is shifting from a world of transactions to a world of relationships.” That said, it’s probably not the best idea to jump into promoting your campaign on Twitter if you don’t already have a strong following.

    I joined Twitter on May 4th, 2009. I began crowdfunding for Cerise on February 2nd, 2010, nine months after I had birthed a modest following. The first people I followed were friends, of course. Then I started searching hashtags (#film and #filmmaking, for example) and following handles like @grking and @kingisafink––people who shared similar interests. Before long, I was engaging in meaningful 140-character conversations about obscure directors like Jodorowsky and sharing my insights on filmmaking with those who followed my tweets.

    It would later be these same followers who would make up my core of initial funders for Cerise. But had I not given myself ample time to genuinely get to know them, to forge actual relationships instead of networks, I would have come across as a spam artist once my campaign had begun.

    Twitter Tip #2: Creativity is King
    It’s important to be creative when phrasing your tweets. It takes a little more time, but your followers will appreciate it since they’ll see that you’re not a @CampaignBot but an actual person who painstakingly crafts each and every promotional tweet as a affirmation of the passion he or she feels for it.


    This is a pretty standard, run-of-the-mill tweet.


    This tweet, however, shows a bit more pizazz and character!

    But even a fun, quirky tweet like @Tearsinrain78 and @grahaminman’s will lose its charm if you see it three times in a row. Linking your personal Twitter account with your project’s can be detrimental to your crowdfunding efforts. Chances are the majority of your followers are also following your project, so if your accounts are linked, your tweets will quickly become redundant. Put in that extra effort and make every tweet from every account something special and worth reading.

    Twitter Tip #3: Always Include Your (Shortened) Link
    When tweeting about your campaign, always include a link to its home page so that the first thing a potential funder sees after they click the link is your pitch video.

    And because every letter and space is precious on Twitter, you should always use a link shortener like Bit.ly or Ow.ly. I use Bit.ly the most because aside from its tracking capabilities, the site also allows users to customize their links, so your link could read bit.ly/TaoCF, which will bring you to my first Tao of Crowdfunding post “Three Ps for a Successful Film Campaign.” This way, it’s easy to remember while on the go and when using a mobile Twitter client.

    Another favorite of mine is Hootsuite’s Hootlet, which allows users to shrink and share a link from a page they’re currently viewing. The Google Chrome-based web browser RockMelt has similar features for maximizing your social media output, though for now it’s a close third for me since it’s still in its most primitive beta stages.

    Twitter Tip #4: #Hashtag #Everything #Relevant to your #Project
    In every tweet you send, be sure to hashtag words and phrases related to your project and campaign. This makes it easy for random people to find your project on Twitter or through a Google search.

    One thing you’ll want to do is find out what words or phrases bring specific communities together on Twitter. They’re sort of like little galaxies in a vast cosmos. For instance, if you’re making a movie, I’ve found that #film, #indiefilm and #filmmaking are popular hashtags for connecting to these communities.


    Right away I know that this is a romantically comedic film based in Oregon.

    If you’re working on a #vampire #film that’s got elements of #filmnoir and #comedy, then you’re quadrupling your outreach into the seemingly endless depths of the Twitterverse.

    Twitter Tip #5: Remember––Don’t Solicit, Elicit
    I introduced this nifty slogan in my previous blog post “A Practical Guide to Crowdfunder Etiquette” and it’s here as well because it’s doubly true when using Twitter.

    Asking people to visit your IndieGoGo page will only get you so far in your campaign, but if your aim is to raise upwards of $15,000, you’ll need to expand your network and start eliciting responses from potential funders and supporters.

    So what’s the difference between soliciting and eliciting? Well, here’s an example of a tweet that solicits, or asks, for help:

    Now there’s nothing wrong with a tweet like this, of course; it’s very similar to the “Make it happen for (fill in your campaign here)” tweet we saw at earlier. But look at this example of a tweet that elicits, or evokes a response:

    Obviously, this tweet for finishing funds for the film Jenny is meant to intrigue and make you want to click the link to see just what this campaign is all about.

    Twitter Tip #6: People Need Their Space
    Some people (myself included) still prefer to append their own messages before an “RT” and as much of your original message as possible. However, if by the time you click “Send” your character count is at zero, you risk possibly losing a personalized retweet that could elicit funds from other people’s followers.

    The retweet button can seem a bit cold a way of spreading the word about your campaign, especially if the person doing the retweeting feels strongly about your project. A well-crafted tweet is no accident, but remember to keep it short and simple and leave at least 15 characters available for that super passionate backer to RT with ease.

    Twitter Tip #7: @Everybody
    Whenever you thank a contributor, be sure to mention (@) that person on Twitter. If you’re not sure if they have a Twitter account or don’t know that person’s handle, do a quick Google search of that person’s name and “on Twitter” and you’ll find him or her fairly easy.


    The crowdfunders behind Jenny are thanking by name and by Twitter handle.

    Even if they don’t use Twitter much or if their little pastel egg of a profile picture hasn’t hatched into the person you know and follow, show your appreciation anyway so it’s on the record, transparent and in plain site of everyone.

    Bonus Tip: Avoid “The Flood” at All Costs!
    Charlie Chaplin said it best in his famous speech at the end of The Great Dictator: “You are not machines, you are men” (and women!) That said, do not flood your feed with tweets exclusively about your campaign.


    This example speaks a thousand words.

    While crowdfunding is a full-time job and you should maintain a steady presence on Twitter while you’re campaigning, you should still be interacting with your followers in ways unrelated to your #Project. Remember, people give to people, not @bots. Once you nurture and maintain those relationships as a person more than a campaigner, you build a network that will walk beside a person they’ll forever be proud to know and support.

    At the end of the day, it’s really all about personalization. That’s the most important thing to walk away from after reading this Tao of Crowdfunding blog post aside from a handful of helpful Twitter tips that will make your campaign a bit more approachable and more likely to reach its IndieGoGoal.

    Categories
    Truly Free Film

    CINEDIGM DIGITAL CINEMA LAUNCHES INDIE DIRECT™

    Everyday brings a better world for the independent filmmaker. Why should today not be like all others?

    I was glad to receive today’s press release announcing Cinedigm’s new endeavor. I was even gladder though to learn of it, which is why I gave them this quote expressing it!

    CINEDIGM DIGITAL CINEMA LAUNCHES INDIE DIRECT™, A FULL SERVICE THEATRICAL DISTRIBUTION AND MARKETING SOLUTION FOR INDEPENDENT FILMS

    Utilizing the Digital Cinema Backbone, Indie Direct™ Navigates Indies Through Theatrical Release Process

    Woodland Hills, CA, September 7, 2011 – Cinedigm Digital Cinema Corp. (NASDAQ: CIDM), the global leader in digital cinema, today announced the formation of Indie Direct™, a full service distribution and marketing solution for independent film producers and distributors.
    Utilizing the digital cinema backbone, Indie Direct™ provides independent producers access to Cinedigm’s long-time industry standard services for managing theatrical digital distribution, including booking software, content delivery, sales, distribution strategy, marketing planning and execution and box office recoupment.

    “From day one of digital cinema, Cinedigm has been at the forefront of deployment and installations,” said Chris McGurk, Chairman and CEO of Cinedigm Digital Cinema. “With Indie Direct™, we have tapped into our many years of experience and expertise to pioneer a turnkey method for indie producers to benefit from the flexible, precise and efficient distribution model digital cinema enables. Now, indie producers can reap the benefits of a full service studio in a one-stop shop.”

    “Cinedigm is offering independent film makers autonomy to control their own destiny with Indie Direct™,” said Ted Hope, acclaimed independent producer of such films as 21 Grams, American Splendor and In the Bedroom. “Anything we can do to strengthen the indie community is vital to the health of the entertainment industry overall and I applaud their efforts.”

    The first two production entities to sign up for Indie Direct™ are ARC Entertainment and Seven Arts Pictures. ARC is using the highest level of Indie Direct™ for eight titles it is releasing by the end of the year, including a horror film double feature with Zombie Diaries and Hellraiser, Smell of Success, Revelations, Killing Bono, Bunraku, Greening of Whitney Brown, Sundance Film Festival pick-up Knuckle, and Snowmen. Seven Arts Pictures will be using Indie Direct™ for the US release of The Pool Boys on September 30, 2011.

    ”A theatrical run tremendously enhances the value of the ancillary downstream revenue opportunities for our projects,” said Trevor Drinkwater, CEO of ARC Entertainment. “Cinedigm’s Indie Direct™ makes that theatrical play both efficient and affordable.”

    ”We are pleased that Indie Direct™ promotes the independent film community by putting a theatrical release within reach, both financially and from an execution perspective, ” said Jill Newhouse Calcaterra, Chief Marketing Officer, Cinedigm. “Previously producers had to go to multiple vendors for these services that are now available under our one roof.”

    Completely customizable based on scope of needs and project release, the suite of services provided by Indie Direct™ includes:
    · Booking software
    · Distribution strategy
    · Sales
    · Content management and delivery
    · In theatre marketing
    · Box Office tracking, settlement and collections
    · Marketing strategy planning
    · Marketing execution
    · Publicity campaign strategy and execution

    About Cinedigm

    Cinedigm is a leader in providing the services, experience, technology and content critical to transforming movie theatres into digital and networked entertainment centers. The Company partners with Hollywood movie studios, independent movie distributors, and exhibitors to bring movies in digital cinema format to audiences across the country. Cinedigm’s digital cinema deployment organization, software, satellite and hard drive digital movie delivery network; pre-show in-theatre advertising services; and marketing and distribution platform for alternative content such as CineLive® 3-D and 2-D sports and concerts, thematic programming and independent movies is a cornerstone of the digital cinema transformation. Cinedigm™ and Cinedigm Digital Cinema Corp™ are trademarks of Cinedigm Digital Cinema Corp. www.cinedigm.com

    Categories
    Truly Free Film

    Michael Collins on “Utilizing Your First Ever Film Festival”

    Toronto International Film Festival begins tomorrow. Getting you film to a festival is a dream come true for most filmmakers. But it is so easy to overlook the great opportunities that are right before you when you attend a festival. Today, doc filmmaker Michael Collins shares some of the lessons he’s learned from his initial experience at Tribeca.

    GIVE UP TOMORROW (Tribeca)
    Written by Michael Collins (Director/Producer)

    For us, the road to Tribeca was extremely long, and sometimes quite grueling. Give Up Tomorrow is our first documentary feature and it took us more than 6 years to complete. Along the way as we navigated overseas productions, unraveled the mysteries of the funding world, and learned what post-production really entails, there are countless lessons that we learned – most thanks to a supportive community of filmmakers and advisors who have been there for us at every turn. But we quickly realized that the adventure doesn’t end when you finish the film and get into a festival, it is just the mark of a new chapter.

    When we got the news that we would be premiering at Tribeca Film Festival, it was truly a dream come true. But along with all the excitement came a healthy dose of fear. We realized we still had a tremendous amount of work ahead of us, and we’d only have one chance to get this right. We immediately reached out to friends and advisors who had premiered at Tribeca in recent years and got some invaluable advice.

    By no means are we experts, in fact quite the opposite.

    Here are a few things that we feel made our experience at Tribeca a rich one:

    We got to know everyone working at the festival
    At all festivals there are so many people working tirelessly behind the scenes to give you the best possible launching ground for your film. Introductions are usually made via email, but it’s so much better to put a face to the names. Leading up to the festival make an effort to stop by the offices if you can. Say a quick “Hello” and see if you can help them out in any way. Let them know you are available and eager to participate in any opportunities that arise, such as industry panels. And get to know the volunteers and theater managers at the screening venues. When you do need their help, it will usually be under serious time-constraints, so get to your screening very early and introduce yourself.

    Utilize your networks, don’t be afraid to ask for help.
    Someone needs to take photos, video, hand out tickets to your guests, etc. You can easily get so caught up in all the legwork surrounding your screenings that you can’t be present to talk with press, talk with key guests, and maybe even enjoy yourself. Reach out to your network and see if you can get a few extra hands to be around at each screening to help with whatever comes up, because something always will.

    Hire a professional publicist
    For doc filmmakers, a photo finish seems to be the norm, and we were no exception. Finishing a film for most of us means a whole lot of post-production expenses piling up at the very end. Hiring a professional publicist was one of the best decisions we made. We were blown away by Tribeca Film Festival’s press office and all the wonderful exposure they generated for us, but the fact remains we were one of nearly 100 films they were responsible for. We chose to work with veterans Winston and David at David Magdael & Associates. They already had relationships with many of the top publications and media outlets, and they also had a great working relationship with the festival.

    Turn each screening into an event
    We invited high profile guests to join us, and organized a place to continue the conversation after the screenings. It was especially important to have a private reception following the premiere because we had all our film subjects with us, our family, friends, representatives from our media funders and foundations who supported us over the years. It was important to celebrate together as a way to thank them, and also to reconnect as we start planning for the next phase. Additionally, having this formal event made it easier to invite many key people such as distributers, NGOs, policy-makers, embassies and politicians who could directly impact the issues raised in the film.

    A reception venue doesn’t have to be expensive. Take the time to check out the bars and restaurants within walking distance of the theater and get to know the managers. Tell them you have a limited budget and see what they can offer. Ask the festival if they have relationships with certain venues and about potential beverage sponsors. Reach out to your media funders and see if they are able to contribute. If you have a film about a particular issue or cause, reach out to organizations that might want to co-host the event. They may just give you a few hundred dollars, but it all adds up. If you have no budget at all, you can usually work something out with a local bar that would allow you to show up with a big crowd and get discounts on drinks.

    Lay the groundwork for a social campaign
    If you made a film that you hope will change the world, take the opportunity to establish campaign partnerships early. There is so much excitement and good energy at festival premieres, so be sure to get key people from organizations you are hoping to partner with into that theater. It was at our reception when Larry Cox, the executive director of Amnesty International, was inspired to stand on a chair and give a passionate speech about his commitment to the film and to getting justice for those involved. We had been in conversations with Amnesty ever since we participated in the Good Pitch in 2009, but having him experience the premiere definitely sealed the deal.

    Bring partners to every screening
    Establishing and maintaining relationships with partner organizations can be time-consuming and take expertise that not all filmmakers have. We decided to make the investment and work with Tracy Fleischman and Lisa Smithline at Cultural Front Productions on this. They helped us formalize the campaign and bring partners to every screening who would join our Q&A discussions. This elevated conversations by exploring larger issues raised in the film, and it also helped to fill seats because these partners were promoting to their networks.

    Stay connected with your audiences
    If you have a social issue film, audiences are going to want to help immediately. Find a way to harness that positive energy by giving them a call to action. In our case we have audiences sign a petition. We gather their email and give them the opportunity to write a note to Paco, the main subject of our film who is in prison. We now stay connected with the audiences through Facebook, twitter and newsletter updates. As our journey continues, and Paco’s case evolves, they are with us.

    I’m writing this from the filmmaker’s café at Dokufest in Kosovo (excited for our outdoor screening tomorrow evening under the stars for 450 people!) and it is exactly 3 months to the day after our premiere. This is our 5th festival and we have many more lined up for the fall. I know that the success of the film today is largely due to the time, energy and resources everyone put into launching at Tribeca. We try to replicate our experience at Tribeca, on a smaller scale, at each new festival. We never just assume that audience will show up, or that the press will feature us, so we do our best to arrive early and get to work. But now we take a little extra time to enjoy these beautiful new cities that we were lucky enough to find ourselves in – because we know this chapter will soon be over as well.

    — Michael Collins