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Issues and Actions

Filmonomics: Thinking in Casts Part I

By Colin Brown

More than 90% of directing a picture is the right casting,” suggests Martin Scorsese in the revelatory documentary CASTING BY. Producers might well reach a similar assessment for financing a picture as well since actors remain by far the most enticing lures to potential investors. But settling on just who might be “right” for that picture is another matter entirely – and a source of constant tension as filmmakers struggle to reconcile the urgent needs of the story with the erratic tastes of the global marketplace and its appointed gatekeepers.

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Casting is rarely a sequential, yes-or-no decision-making process that involves working your way down a long list of actors who have been somehow calibrated according to their creative merits and box office bankability. That would be too easy. Unless your director’s name happens to be Scorsese, more than 90% of the time will be spent casting out again and again into an ocean of uncertainty and inconsistency not knowing which way the winds will blow. You need good hooks as well as good fortune to fish in those waters, the tenacity to keep going, an unwavering hand and eye to thread that needle, and the improvisational skills to react to what’s constantly changing around you. Not unlike acting itself.

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Truly Free Film

Christine Vachon and I Explain It ALL For You

Yup, here’s how we started, what allowed us to get our first films made, what secrets we learned, what models we used, and how it is all is changing.  This video is from a few years back, but it is still mostly all still very relevant and pertinent.

So, recorded live at the Spotted Dog in Birmingham, UK it’s Killer/Hope:

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Truly Free Film

Towards A Sustainable Investor Class: Group Learning And Lift

Surround yourself with smart people who know different things than you do.

That’s good advice, isn’t it?  Common sense, really.  Other than changing environments, nothing else will spark creativity so well. It will help you in everything you do, from making better decisions to discovering new passions.

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The Next Good Idea Truly Free Film

Simple Fix: Identify Film Images As Film Images

This digital age requires us to be specific.  We need to identify things so we can find things. We can not just leave things alone and expect that they will be discovered.

I get frustrated when I find a good website or article and I am limited on how I can share it. One of the reasons I like Pinterest so much is that it is so easy to use and share. Yet many sites and articles don’t include “pinable” images that drive the viewer back to the page itself, so you can pin them, or if you can, it is not an automatic link.  Heck, I know that I am guilty of such slack; I rarely include images on my posts, which makes them difficult to share.  And even when I do, I forget to put in a custom URL so that it drives the Pinterest viewer back to the post. 

Yet, I am grateful for this slack of mine, for it exposes a bigger problem that we all face.  The same problem — I mean, opportunity — is

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Truly Free Film

Diary of a Film Startup: Post # 39: Music for Movies, Expert Tips, Part I of II

By Roger Jackson and Klaus BadeltKinoSmall

Previously: Whatever It Takes

Some directors believe that music is a full 50% of a film. And that there are fundamentally just 3 or 4 “true” creative inputs to the movie — the writer, the director, the composer…perhaps the editor. Whatever the numbers, movie music — that skillful combination of score and song — has the potential to turn a good story into an amazing audience experience. But how do you musically super-charge an indie film when you don’t have the budget to hire a top composer?

I asked Kinonation co-founder — and prolific film score composer — Klaus Badelt.

Klaus has scored over 80 films. His work spans Hollywood blockbusters such as Gladiator, Pirates of the Caribbean, Catwoman, Poseidon, Rescue Dawn, 16 Blocks, The Recruit, K-19. And a ton of US and European indies, including documentaries, shorts and even video games.

Here’s what Klaus has to say about making the very best — and most economical — music choices for a film.

1. Composer as Filmmaker

The director-composer relationship is that of two filmmakers. It’s not about musical genres, or instruments. It’s about driving the story and emphasizing characters and creating emotion. That’s the role of music in film.

2. Script

Think about music (both score and songs) at the script-writing stage. Fundamentally, a filmmaker must decide what character development and story arc she wants from each scene. That is, how do you want the audience to feel about this episode? There should be a single, unambiguous answer. i.e. every shot in every scene must have a clear objective in moving the story forward. So thinking about the music at this stage– and making musical choices — actually helps propel and clarify the script-writing process. Deciding where the music in each scene starts — and where it fades — forces you to think with greater clarity about story shapes & arcs.

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Truly Free Film

The Next 100 Years Are Safe! Exhibition Is Not Under Threat From Netflix

by Russ Collins

Why Theatrical?

1)     Aesthetic mandate — for the film to have its full impact or be fully appreciated it must be perfectly presented on a BIG screen in a beautiful darkened room full of strangers full of artistic anticipation and cultural curiosity – the ART demands it. It is also why we go hear live music concerts, live stage and dance performances at theaters and actual paintings, sculptures and other visual art works in museums and galleries and have real art, not reproductions, hanging in our own homes.  Art authenticity is a virtue!

2)     Marketing godsend —

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Truly Free Film

Towards A Sustainable Investor Class: Make Numerous Small Bets

It is highly regarded as common sense to “not put all your eggs in one basket”. Yet most film investors, win or lose, get out after just one or two investments. This is not good for them and it is not good for the creators, either.

Just like the filmmakers, investors in Indie Film tend to