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Truly Free Film

How I Learned to Stop Whining and Love the Game

by Katherine Bruens

I work professionally as a Producer and Production Manager in the advertising industry and independent film world here in San Francisco. I am also one half of a partnership that has produced three micro budget features here. Rather than become frustrated that the market in San Francisco has demanded that I spread my attention between these three worlds, I’ve embraced this hybrid.  This market gives me a way not only to maintain my freedom to usher forward new personally driven works, but it also allows me to produce media through a broad spectrum of strategies, sometimes with vastly different amounts of money. What’s more, in the end these projects are all trying to achieve a similar result.

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Truly Free Film

FEAR & MOVIES: Morocco, Hollywood and Me

By John Slattery 

Having been overseas for three and a half years, I returned to the United States.

When I came back, I came straight to San Francisco.

In the first few weeks people would ask, “So, where’d you move here from?” When I told them I’d just come from a year of teaching in Paris, 99% of their responses had a similar theme, which all fit into one category: I LOVE PARIS!

Typical responses were:

“Paris! Wow, lucky you!”; or

“You know my wife and I had our honeymoon in Paris”; or just,

“Man, I love Paris!”

 

Often in the same conversations, their follow up question had to do with where I was before Paris. When I told them that I’d been a Peace Corps Volunteer in Morocco for two and a half years – they had a very different kind of response.

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Truly Free Film

“Monty Python ReUnites — And I Am Along For The Ride!”

by Meyer Schwartzstein

I had a thrilling experience that I’d like to share with anyone who’s ever hoped to work with their idol.  It can happen – and it can be fun!

When I was 17 years old, I would look forward to Sunday evenings when Monty Python’s Flying Circus aired on WTTW, the Chicago PBS station.  It was the funniest thing on TV!  Ever since then, I’ve been a big Monty Python fan.  (My wife and I even communicate in Python-ese.)

So in 2010, when a friend of mine asked me if I’d like to be involved in a Graham Chapman biopic – I jumped at the opportunity.  (He told me that I may even be able to make some money on the film, but I would’ve done it for dinner with a Python…)

The story of the film is incredible.  Jeff Simpson, a UK filmmaker (who also was one of the producers of Top of the Pops for the BBC) was fascinated by the fact that Graham was overtly gay but secretly alcoholic.  Thinking that Graham would be a great subject for a documentary, Jeff approached Bill Jones and Ben Timlett to see if they’d work with him on it.  They had just produced a multi-part Python documentary and knew all things Python.  But Bill and Ben didn’t want to do another talking heads doc.  But there was this recording…

 

Graham co-wrote his autobiography with four other writers (yes, you read that right).  Published in 1980, it was called A Liar’s Autobiography, Volume VI.  Graham and David Sherlock (Graham’s partner and one of the co-writers the book) then tried to have the book made into a film, but they weren’t happy with the options presented to them.  Then, in 1989, Graham selfishly died.  Fortunately, before he did, Graham recorded the book on tape at Harry Nilsson’s studio.

 

So, the three filmmakers approached David Sherlock up in some rainy part of the UK with this crazy idea about animating the book and, for some reason, David said “yes.”

 

The first task was to boil down the 3 hours of recordings to about 80 minutes of material.  For this task, they turned to Andre Jacquemin.  Andre did the sound for every Monty Python episode, every Monty Python movie, and every Terry Gilliam movie, so he was the perfect guy to build the sound for this movie.  Once that was done, the trio worked with animation chief Justin Weyers to job out sections to 14 animation studios.  They then delivered sections in 17 different animated styles – and in 3D!  (Bill, Ben and Jeff’s first pitch said, “The final animated feature will not only bring Chapman back from the grave, but will do so in amazing stereoscopic 3D” – I think they liked saying that 3D bit…)

 

 

 

When the film was in production, I had the good fortune of having dinner with 3 Pythons – Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones and Michael Palin AND I was able to witness and join in the recording sessions the next day.  It was amazing.

 

The making of the film was a family affair – quite literally. Bill Jones is Terry Jones’s son.  Margarita Doyle, the line producer, is the daughter of the production manager of Monty Python and the Holy Grail.  (She was the one who operated the killer rabbit!).  And Andre Jacquemin’s daughter Jamie chipped in with her dad in the studio.  And anyone who wasn’t family was greeted like family.

 

For me, it was a dream.  It couldn’t have happened if EPIX hadn’t become a partner in the project.  Or if Trinity hadn’t been on board.

 

Completed early this year, the film was very kindly invited by the Toronto International Film Festival as a Special Presentation.  On Friday, November 2nd, the film opens theatrically and will premiere on EPIX.

 

Please check out A Liar’s Autobiography: The Untrue Story of Monty Python’s Graham Chapman.  I can assure you that you’ve never seen anything like it.  In fact, go see it twice – after all, it’s a lot to take in.  Yeah, it’s a bit rude, it’s funny, it gets serious in parts, and it’ll get a little unclear as to what’s true and what’s a lie.  There’s a gratuitous guest appearance by Cameron Diaz, as well as some other cameos (credited and uncredited), so that will be worth it alone!

 

When David Sherlock screened it, he gave the film and its directors a big compliment.  He thinks it captured Graham’s spirit.  That’s pretty cool…  Bill, Ben and Jeff are all very creative – and there will be many more wonderful projects that will come from their fingers – just you watch!

 

So, I met my idols, and they turned out to be really nice and just as funny as ever.  The written lines came to life when they recorded them.  Before me they appeared as those young men who thrilled me when I watched them in my family’s den back in Chicago.

Meyer Shwarzstein started in the entertainment business in 1977 as general manager of a Chicago-based rock’n’roll magazine.  He moved to Los Angeles in 1980, landed a job at MGM and, in 1983, he joined indie distributor Atlantic Releasing.  He has been an indie ever since.  In 1995, he formed Brainstorm Media, which handled sales for various companies including Lionsgate, Magnolia, Image and many more.  Meyer’s company has evolved into a full-fledged US distributor and has been involved in producing dozens of films.

 
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Truly Free Film

Creating Newsletters For Your Film Project

By Laura Hammer

As PMD on Leah Meyerhoff’s I Believe In Unicorns, part of my job was to send newsletter updates to our base of supporters.  Newsletters are not just for announcing screenings! They are an integral part of audience engagement and get people involved in your project as early as development stages.  Your subscribers email boxes are flooded with newsletter campaigns from companies and projects and they will barely have time for yours.  Do not bother them with something hideous (lacking design effort) and difficult to read (text too small or the length of an encyclopedia).

Newsletter layouts have four essential components: Header, Body, *Sidebar, and Footer.   *Depending on the layout you pick you may have no sidebar, one, or multiple sidebars! If choosing multiple sidebars, I would advise picking a layout where these columns are below the main body text and above the footer.   Choose wisely and investigate your own email box for designs that stand out.

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Truly Free Film

Diary of a Film Start-Up Part 10: Three Months of Work

By Roger Jackson

Previously: Filmmakers Festival Feedback

3 Months In

We’ve been at it for three months now. Building a platform like KinoNation from scratch is an enormous amount of work, and like most start-ups we have limited resources. But we’re having fun, meeting a ton of really great people in the indie film world, and making rapid progress. Most important, we’re increasingly certain that KinoNation is a viable business, and we’ve been able to validate (prove) most of  our early assumptions.

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Truly Free Film

Traditional Marketing vs. Social Media Marketing… and the Results

By Reid Rosefelt

Everything in traditional movie marketing is generated by the marketers: publicity, reviews, posters, trailers and TV spots, websites, ads, and so on. It is a one way / top-down process. The marketers make all this stuff and hope that all or part of it will somehow register in the consciousness of potential moviegoers.

Social media marketing works the complete opposite way.

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Truly Free Film

Empty out the barn and put on a show! The Beginning of FIRST TIME FEST

by Mandy Ward

I’ve had my fair share of ups and downs. Looking for fresh content after producing in NYC for nearly 10 years and working for a production company in Tribeca was not as easy as it seemed. There was a gaping hole that I discovered in my search: a reluctance to finance, produce, and distribute anything by first time directors. I would read dozens of scripts a week and see nothing but old stories reworked and retold (or genre-based just for genre’s sake). But occasionally, I would stumble onto an amazing, ORIGINAL, imaginative and well written story by a first time writer or director and pitch it around. And this would be the response: “This is amazing. Great writing, seems like a big talent… BUT NO THANKS.” This would happen not once – but literally hundreds of times! It was not only frustrating, but it left me thinking: “What is to become of the film industry if we do not support new thinkers and artists?” And the answer: We are left with the same people, the same styles and the same stories. And they will attract ever-diminishing audiences.