Categories
The Next Good Idea

Recycle Something New This Year

Well, not new.  I mean recycle something you have never recycled before.  I am going to start with some of those old cell phones that I haven’t ever been able to figure out what to do with.  

Secure The Call is a website you can use to do just that: recycle your cell phone.  It’s not that they recycle it in that they don’t break it down.  They repurpose it:

We’re a non-profit coalition of Police Departments, Sheriff’s Offices, Battered Women’s Shelters, Neighborhood Watch Groups, Community Service Organizations and Senior Citizen Centers. We take your donated phone and convert it into a 911 emergency only phone and give it back to our coalition partners for distribution.

If you don’t want to stop there and want to start to e-cycle the rest of your electronics, the EPA maintains partnerships with a whole bunch of retailers where you can take your stuff to discard of properly.  The list is here.

Or maybe you want to donate your old computer to a school or organization that needs it.  The National Christina Foundation is a not-for-profit dedicated to the support of training through donated equipment.  You can donate your computer to them.
Categories
These Are Those Things

The Creative Process, Pt. 2

Back at the end of August, we posted about the How We Work site that showed various writers’ rituals and methods.  Last month, Scott Macaulley hipped us to Daily Routines  on “how writers, artists, and other interesting people organize their day”.  From filmmakers, to drinkers & drug takers, to Ben Franklin, this one hits on many of our heroes.  After all the journey is the destination, and getting lost is half the fun.

And if you are into this sort of thing, don’t forget to check out the NYTimes’ Writers On Writing.
Categories
Bowl Of Noses

Didja Know?

The total number of cells in a human brain may be no more than those in a watermelon.

Obviously though: the diversity and functions of those cells in the brain exceed those in a fruit.

Categories
Truly Free Film

If Words Were Not Enough

The video of almost all my keynote address from the Art House Convergence just got posted.


Ted Hope Art House Convergence Closing Remarks from joe zina on Vimeo.
Categories
Bowl Of Noses

Robo Roundup: Farmers & Actors

(thanks BoingBoing!)
And here’s a post how robots are now replacing actors on stage in Japan.
Categories
Truly Free Film

Hope For The Future pt. 11: The List #’s 43 -46

43. Both the creative and business sides of the film industry are embracing the streaming of features. Both Hulu and Snag are looked at as success stories, although the short form and clips remain most popular with audiences. The key to specialized films’ success has always been creating word of mouth. Regional screenings and publicity has always been an expensive undertaking, prohibiting niche film from truly undertaking such a campaign. Streaming makes it all possible. A limited streaming campaign could do wonders for building an audience’s desire to see a particular film. When directors like Michael Moore and Wayne Wang climb aboard the streaming bandwagon (as both did this year), one can only hope legions will follow.

44. Green awareness: slowly the entire industry is waking up to the fact that there is no away to throw to. Last year less than half of the distributors distributed their award screeners in cardboard packaging. This year all the major ones did. Granted you still have to police sets to make sure bottles are being recycled, and offices to make sure that paper is – but it is much improved from before. I still haven’t been asked to put a carbon offset into a budget, but I am confident that day will come. Green carpets became the vogue over red this year. At the very least, the industry seems to be embarrassed by their waste. Maybe the days of excessive consumption are numbered…

45. The career/financial sustainability of producers is at least now recognized as an issue somewhere in the world. In the U.S. we have watched virtually every studio cut virtually every producer-based overhead deal. On one hand it seems that the US film industry has forgotten what a producer does, but across the ocean, there is a ray of hope. It has been enacted as law that the UK tax credit must be counted as the producer’s equity, thus increasing the back end a producer would have on any given project. Once local municipalities in the US start providing prolific producers with office space then we will know we are on the right foot! The longevity of producers is the cornerstone of fostering a film community’s growth.

46. Filmmakers are recognizing the benefits of limiting the time spent between films. When the American Indie scene kicked into gear in the late 80’s, the directors were quite prolific. Up until recently, the new generations of filmmakers seemed to take five more years in between projects. The directors’ pursuit of larger budgets necessitated this to some degree, but also limited their ability to build a loyal following worldwide. Whether it is the Mumblecore crowd of Swanberg or The Duplass Brothers, or the world vision practitioners like Sean Baker and Ramin Bahrini , this new generation is aiming more for growth in their work than growth in their budgets. The audience will benefit as these directors mature.

Categories
Let's Make Better Films

The Pervert’s Guide To Cinema

One of my favorite viewing experiences last year was Sophie Fienes’ playful and thoughtful essay film on rockstar philosopher Slavoj Zizek’s rant on the role of cinema.  As my friend described it “a clarion call for cinephilia”.  Lucky for you, Sophie is distributing it herself and it is now playing at the IFC here in NYC.  She’s even going to be at the theater friday and saturday evening.  I almost got on the plane and flew back from Sundance just so I could see it again!

IFC describes it as:

To explore the power and mystery of movies, the charismatic, garrulous psychoanalyst/philosopher/cinephile Slavoj Zizek revisits Vertigo, Duck Soup, Dr. Strangelove and dozens of other classics. Walking through locations and sets and even inserting himself into key scenes, he declares cinema to be “the ultimate pervert art. It doesn’t give you what you desire — it tells you how to desire.” Whether untangling David Lynch’s labyrinthine work or upending everything you thought you knew about Hitchcock, Zizek illuminates the movies with passion, insight and an unfailing sense of humor, resulting in what The Times of London hailed as “an extraordinary reassessment of cinema.”

Check out the website here.

I also had a great encounter this fall when my wife spotted Zizek at a street fair.  We went up for a talk, hopeful of the wisdom from one of the world’s great minds.  We walked for over a mile but I could barely get a word in edgewise as Zizek and my eight year old son discussed Yugi-oh! cards and their super-specific economy and how it varied across the world.  The guy knew the spell power of Green-Eyed Dragon!