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Truly Free Film

The Digital Recession, Pt 2: The Problem With Piracy

By Jim Cummings

The amount of digital piracy in a country is correlated to the average internet speed. It would be very time consuming to download Avatar on a dial-up modem, so many in El Salvador will have to buy a hard copy, but Americans often watch movies online for free simply by googling the movie’s title followed by the word “streaming”. As if this isn’t already easy enough, advancements in internet speeds will only make watching movies for free easier, or in my opinion, ubiquitous.

In 2010, a filmmaker friend of mine raised

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Truly Free Film

The Digital Recession

By Jim Cummings

In 2011, a speaker at a reputable film festival said to an audience of filmmakers, “the best part about making movies today is that anyone can make movies, and the worst part is also that anyone can make movies.” I turned to inspect the audience because I wondered, as I do still, to whom he was speaking? How could it ever be good for artisans that everyone can make art? What realtor or travel agent is thrilled by new advancements in global connectivity and the democratization of their work? We are all the victims of an imploding digital revolution and although many seem confused about what this means for our future, and the pursuit of film as a career, I’d like to be honest about my experiences in the economics of art, where we seem to be heading, and how we might survive the fallout.

Our first short film was seen by over a million people in 140 counties.

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Truly Free Film

Jennifer Lawrence Does Not Want To Be In Your Movie: Lessons Learned Casting Our Microbudget Feature

By Scott K. Foley and Josh Rosenberg

Maya and DP Joe Fitz

When we set out to cast our microbudget feature, Jessica, we were certain we’d be able to quickly find an up-and-coming actress to star. I mean we’d written a script about a complicated and conflicted character, the kind of breakout-caliber role that actors dream about, and one that with a bit of luck would propel their careers, all of our careers, to the next level. What we didn’t know was how, as first time and microbudget filmmakers, we’d be expending an enormous amount of time and energy trying to get past the gatekeepers and how some much appreciated tough-love advice from an unexpected source would finally allow us to move forward and start making our movie.

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Truly Free Film

Ye Olde Complete Guide to Formats

by Andrew Einspruch

Filmmaker Andrew Einspruch recently attended the Australian International Documentary Conference and wrote a series of articles for the event, which he’s graciously allowed us to reprint here. These articles originally appeared in Screen Hub, the daily online newspaper for Australian film and television professionals.

You’d already know that formats are all over your TV screen. From Big Brotherto Who Wants to Be Millionaire to Go Back to Where You Came From, formats (shows with “a framework which contains several clearly described elements that are combined in a unique way”) are TV mainstays. What you might not know is that worldwide in 2009, formats generated production worth € 9.3 billion (that’s with a “b”), or $11.8 billion. And that amount would only have gone up since then.

Patty Geneste knows a thing or two about formats. Her company, Absolutely Independent, has won several international awards for the formats it represents, and she sits on the board of the Format Recognition and Protection Association (FRAPA). So she brought lots of expertise to her AIDC session on dealmaking.

The first formats were gameshows, like Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy. Next came light entertainment, like You Bet or Honeymoon Quiz. Today, formats cover a wide range of styles, from factual entertainment to scripted or constructed reality, from observational documentary to comedy drama. Shows that are formats are often not obviously so. The drama Homeland, for example, was an Israeli format sold into the US.

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These Are Those Things

“ADRIFT”: Video Love Poem To San Francisco (And Commitment And Uniqueness And Artistry)

Do you have enough beauty in your life?  Do you need something to make you feel that life is worth living?  That you are fortunate to be on this planet? That it is a gift to see and experience these things?  If so, you may need a prescription for beauty.

Have you learned to foster a deep appreciation for the strange and wonderful? Do you know how to have confidence in your least shared desires?  Can you feel that warm surge for the thing that others may instinctively turn away from?  If you are missing such pleasures, you need to develop a practice that celebrates difference a little more.  You need a course in Fog Appreciation 101.

Do you know what it is like to use your labor, intellect, passion, and creativity in service of something greater than yourself?  When you look at the things around you, do you see representations of your commitment or that of others?  Are you inspired by the displays of similar commitment in the work and accomplishments of others?  I believe that if you can, if you do, you too will do more with the gifts and opportunities before you.  Learn to look at the labor encased in the thing that you admire.

It is on these lines that I was inspired by Simon Christen’s short and gorgeous video “ADRIFT”.  Granted, I was well prepped for it.  I have been living in San Francisco for less than a year.  I am still awestruck by the action of fog.  And the play of fog with the rest that this land has to offer.  Part of the pleasure for me too, was in watching, considering the commitment that Simon must have had to make this movie for us.  Thank you Simon.

And before you watch it perhaps you should consider what these feelings I described above would be worth for you.  Think about a reverse crowdfunding campaign, where if you knew someone would deliver these feelings and thoughts to you what you would be willing to pay.  Think about if you knew someone would have to hike regularly in the cold and in the wet in the early morning hours and then afterwards sort through the results, painstakingly come to know them intimately, aligning them next to each other to such an extent that the beauty maybe started to diminish and the artist behind them might question whether all those days and hours were truly worth it, would they ever get to a point where someone would say “Yeah, that was worth a dollar of my time.”  How can we say loudly “Yes, Simon, thank you.”?  Luckily, Vimeo has a tip jar. Don’t forget it after you watch.

 

Adrift from Simon Christen on Vimeo.

Hat Tip to Ryan Heller for sending me the short!

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Let's Make Better Films

One Week Left To Apply For A Fellowship In Paradise

Imagine one of the most beautiful places in the United States.  Give yourself a month there.  Imagine a private room designed by a great architect.  Add on a miles and miles of a private art park, kind of like Storm King in NY but with the work hidden and no one else to encounter in the woods.  Did I mention old growth forests?  Add that too.  Now sprinkle on a dozen artists of different disciplines.  Top it with a private chef. 

Would that be enough for you to apply for a screenwriting fellowship?

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Truly Free Film

Diary of a Film Startup: Post # 31: Kinonation — Mistakes Made, Lessons Learned…

By Roger Jackson

Previously: Movie Live on VoD…Now What?

Ted Hope recently asked me to write about what we might have done differently at Kinonation with the benefit of a year’s hindsight. Mistakes made, lessons learned, what worked, what didn’t…

1. Big, Fat Assumptions

Most startups ventures are premised on one or more big, fat assumptions…which may or may not be accurate, even if you’re convinced they are. Kinonation is based on the assumptions that it’s really hard to get indie films widespread VoD distribution…and that there’s a huge backlog of films whose producers want help with this problem…and that the VoD outlets are actually interested in running indie films…and they have the audience to watch them.