Jeff Lipsky, director of the Sundance hit ONCE MORE WITH FEELING (among others), distributor of Cassavettes (among others), co-founder of October Films (among others) — this man knows the lay of the land. He recently participated in a show Christine Vachon and I did up at Sundance for Filmcatcher (soon to be streamed on their site), and I was once again reminded of his incredible enthusiasm and knowledge of all aspects of the film business. I only asked him for ten reasons he was bullish on the state of indie. I get the sense that if I hadn’t capped it, he’d still be adding to the list.
Author: Ted Hope
My son and I share a great enthusiasm for pranks. Maybe it is a gene. I have been trying to pinpoint when I recognized that they were one of the great things that could be accomplished in our short stay. I am still searching the memory stacks, but this rates in terms of filmed history. I was probably eight years old when I saw it. And granted, it’s not an outright full throttle prank, but in watching it you know rules are broken and fun is had.
I wish this instrument could fill a sixty story building with hundreds of gillions of drawers with each one being a different sound. Think of symphony that a third grade class could engineer. We particularly like the sound of “Wit’s End”; we know it well.
I got this comment from filmmaker and blogger Eric Escobar and felt it was right on. When I started out there was much talk in indie circles about the regional film movement. Traveling around film festivals and seeing movies from the community, that captures their authenticity, is a specific pleasure that can’t be duplicated. HUMPDAY for Seattle, MEDICINE FOR MELANCHOLY for San Francisco. This is a list that can and should and will be expanded. Thanks Eric, for this comment — I just had to bump it to a post:
The promise of potential work on the assembly line of the filmmaking factory makes artists make bad movies in the hopes of proving their factory-worth.
Build incentives for filmmakers to stay local, like what the SFFS is starting to do in San Francisco with office space and direct cash grants.
Let the communities of actors, writers and filmmakers flourish, and have them artistically accountable to telling stories about who they are and where they’re from.
LA has ruined so many imaginations in the pursuit of a decent monthly check. And I really don’t want to see another movie about Brooklyn made by a filmmaker who moved there last week.
Todd Sklar has finished has Range Life tour has a lot to tell you about what he’s learned. He’s posted it up at the indispensable Workbook Project: Part One, Part Two.
- You jump the gun on building buzz and then lose momentum and interest before it’s time to utilize that buzz.
- You jump the gun on your release and can’t support it with the necessary content or resources & planning b/c it’s a full time job just maintaining whatever momentum and interest your gaining from the film’s release.
In part two, Todd expands upon new rules:
- You need to have a solid website 5 minutes after you’ve written the script.
- You need to have a solid trailer 5 days after you’ve wrapped shooting.
- You need to release your DVD within 6 weeks of your premiere.
- You need to start making your DVD 6 hours after you’ve made your final cut.
- You need to do your theatrical release within 2-4 weeks of your festival premiere You need to implement a festival premiere into your release platform, and there’s no better/other way to do it than utilizing it as the springboard for your theatrical release.
- You need to look at the theatrical release as a brand building and audience building campaign and focus on exposure and press secondly.
- You need to be ready to make your next one before your release this one.
- You need to roll with the punches and remember to focus on your planning your work and working your plan.
- you need sell DVD’s during your theatrical release.
These are some of my favorite things:
- Essay films
- Simple Graphics, animated
- Better Communication
- The Internet
Old School Cartoons

Early on in his days H2Y asked “Why is old school so much cooler than new school?” Volumes could be written on that, but here in The Bowl we just prefer to serve up another helping and hope that the sweet flavor of the old points the way.