Categories
Truly Free Film

Another Day, Another Radio Show

Musicians put out a new song every day, don’t they? Well, I am sure some do.

Well, I have another recording now available if you did not get enough of them last week. It may be a tad stale, as the interview was given before my Woodstock speech, but I still think it will taste good.

Categories
Bowl Of Noses

Seven Great Places To Go

For now we just have to put them on the To Do List, but wouldn’t it be great if we had a transpoder to take us there right now. Or a Tardis. I guess we will have to settle for a virtual 360 degree tour of Seven Wonders

Categories
Truly Free Film

1+1=2 How To Get Distribution For Your Film

Okay, this isn’t the only answer, and I don’t have the energy to do a comprehensive list, yet… but as I sorted through my various AM emails, a saw a common theme in two of them.

One: A B-Side email blast reminded me that Todd Sklar’s Range Life Fall NW Tour kicked off last weekend. I have found Todd’s taking-it-to-the-people traveling film fest in a van truly exciting. If I could do that list of exciting developments in the truly free ring this would be one of those things. I for one was particularly intrigued to see that MYSTERY TEAM was one of the films in the tour.
Two: In an overview of Brit DIY for The Guardian today, the UK DIY hit MORRIS is compared with other unseen DIY films and it is pointed out:

What saved Morris was a trip to the countryside: they organised a tour around the village halls of south-west England, where their film became a word-of-mouth hit. That allowed its makers to bypass the distributors and go straight to the exhibitors. Morris was finally picked up by the Picturehouse cinema chain, which agreed to roll it out on wider release, beginning last week.

It makes me wonder what would happen if a filmmaker, either on their own or working with a grassroots community film organizer, acted immediately after hearing they were invited to a major festival to book their film in small community non-theatrical venues without waiting for that never-to-arrive distribution offer — you know: instead, take it directly to the people and prove the film’s playability. In fact, as Todd has shown such playability with his own film BOX ELDER, even without that major festival acceptance.
The math here adds up: Know your audience. Bring the film to that right audience. Don’t subscribe to a passive discovery process. You are the fuel. Light a match.
Additional Note: via Facebook, director Tom Quinn informed us:

We just booked a week-long theatrical run in Philadelphia through Landmark for The New Year Parade and are going to see how that community-based release works for us. Will keep you posted!”

Categories
Truly Free Film

Change The "Indie" Model — Claim It For Yourself!

You probably already read how Anne Thompson suggested the specialized film companies move into the niche business. Me, I hope the mini-majors stay exactly where they are, and some of the great minds and visionary capital I have been speaking to recently claim the true niche as their own instead.

That said, there is a logic to what Anne suggests. There also some great comments to her post.

I felt real solidarity with what we have been discussing from Mark Lipsky:

There *is* a new model and it’s online. One of the primary problems moving forward is that Anne (until this column) and her colleagues in the media have continued to blindly promote the myth that Weinstein and Miramax and Focus and Searchlight have anything at all to do with independent film. In this column and at long last, Anne asks the most relevant question to come out of the trade media in years: What if the future is about more narrow-niche movies…?” Bingo. The future for what’s left of the genuinely independent film community will remain bleak until it can win back the indie film label, rebuild the indie film community, re-educate film-goers and the media about independent film and then spread the gospel to the hundreds and thousands of independent-minded filmmakers out there who don’t even try because they think they have to raise millions of dollars and cast Brad Pitt in order to succeed.

But read Anne’s post and check out the comments for yourself.

Categories
Truly Free Film

If I Were A Rock Star…

Like that would ever happen. I am one who can’t even dream such things. My son has even banned me from ever singing in his vicinity. Being tone deaf, as I am is one thing, but add to it a nasal honk that some have compared to a goose (but with a less sweet sound), and you see why that particular pursuit is out of my reach.

But that doesn’t stop me from recording. Two of my recent yackfests have gone up on line this week:
Showbiz Sandbox with both myself and Christine Vachon talking about the current state of the union for independent film:

Give them a listen and let me know if you have any questions.

Categories
Truly Free Film

Big Muckamuck: Hey Hollywood! Do What Truly Free Filmakers Are Doing!

Bill Mechanic, a man that is as responsible as anyone for building Hollywood as we know it and an incredibly smart man and passionate film fan at that, has been doing a lot of public speaking lately. Whenever he speaks, I learn something; I also understand our business better. Despite making far larger films than I can even dream of, he still knows what is critical to all film’s success (and our industry’s survival).

In the keynote speech he recently gave at the Independent Film and Television Production Conference, Mechanic chastised the mainstream movie industry by asking:
When was the last time you heard anyone either from a studio or an independent talking about improving their product, of creating positive buzz and expanding the audience?
Isn’t this precisely what we have been talking about for the last year here? Isn’t that what we need to do if we want to survive?
He goes on to advise:
An independent… should make movies individualistic and compelling… that actually do stand out and succeed because of their quality and their uniqueness.
Read Mechanic’s whole speech. It is full of great nuggets. It generated many of my morning’s twitter posts yesterday.
Categories
Truly Free Film

Wanted: List Of Websites That Post Trailers

When I spoke at IFF at TIFF with Festival Darling‘s Thomas Mai, he said there were 154 websites that posted film trailers. We need that list. Maybe Thomas will share it with us, but in the meantime with Sundance around the corner and Berlin on it’s heels, we can’t afford to wait to post. Let’s build that list! What sites do you know?

And hey, since it is my birthday, why not give out your knowledge as a gift? If not, I will settle for a good bottle of single malt…