Corporate Sponsorship of a film, in any way, is a tricky thing. A viewer who becomes aware of multiple agendas in a film, generally is no longer going to be “with” the film. They become suspect. But sponsorship is not the same as turning your art into a commercial. There are many methods and many benefits to consider when considering corporate sponsorship (I will try to cover the negative side in another post in the future).
Tag: Film Festival Strategy
Film Festival Plan A:Postcards
(Today’s post courtesy of director Jon Reiss)
Get the key art sized for a 4×6 postcard as well as at full film poster. Its way too expensive to offset your film poster now. But you can get single printouts from most digital printers for about $50-$60 each and you only need one or two.
For the postcard, have your key art on the front and have film, contact and screening information on the back. Printing postcards are very inexpensive now. You can get 4000 for $100 at NextDayFlyers.com (and 1000 postcards for $39.95). For super low budget create one postcard with your general contact and film information on the back and leave room for putting stickers for your show times. BUT since postcards are so cheap now – I really recommend printing your screening time on the back of the postcard. It can take a bit of time to print and stick the stickers on the back of the postcards and you are very busy. A compromise is to print your first festival screenings on the back (esp since this is often your most important screening) and to use the rest for other fests putting the label over your first set of screenings.
Don’t forget business cards – I recommend putting your film title treatment on the front with your films website so that people remember why they have your card. Again these can be printed very inexpensively – 1000 for around $10-$20.
In a couple of weeks I will start putting downloadable PDF samples of Key Art on my website www.jonreiss.com
When I first started going to Sundance, it was just a bunch of filmmakers and a bunch of filmlovers. Filmmakers had no entourage. No one told them what to do or what they thought was right; instead they shared information and secrets. But that was then.
For years, I have recommended filmmakers do all they could to bond with the other filmmakers they met at festivals, for as the films travelled festival to festival, these other filmmakers would become their support group, their friends, perhaps even more.
It seems ludicrous to head into a festival these days and not have a website or blog for your film in advance. It seems silly not to have that web address built into you film end credits. It doesn’t have to be a final or even a polished site, but there should be something. How else will you tell your audience how they can participate in the experience or even see your film?
Beyond a website or a blog, filmmakers should do the simple outreach chores. Build a Wiki page for your film. Create a MySpace and/or Facebook profile for your film. Make sure all the info is in IMDB.
If you are so fortunate as to have your film selected for Sundance, there is a good chance that your festival screening will be the peak point of media activity on your film. Unless your film is going to be released by a major distributor, more attention will be paid during this period ever again. Are you going to take advantage of this attention or are you going to squander it?
Preparing For The Film Festivals
Its that time of the year when filmmakers nationwide get all antsy. Sundance generally starts to let filmmakers know whether their work has been selected for the festival around the end of October. This ritual extends for about four weeks until Thanksgiving gives everyone a break.