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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Cinema Eye Selects 2nd Annual Nominees at Sundance

At Sundance yesterday, nominees for the 2nd annual Cinema Eye Honors for Nonfiction Filmmaking were announced. The Film Panel Notetaker will bring you coverage of the ceremony taking place March 29 in New York. In the mean time, here's various reportage from Stranger Than Fiction blog, All These Wonderful Things and indieWIRE from the nominations ceremony. And for a look back at last year's #2 panel discussion from the Cinema Eye Roundtable Discussion, click here.

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The Absentee Panel Notetaker at Sundance

While The Film Panel Notetaker did not make it out to Sundance, we've gathered a menagerie of links to other people's coverage of the panels taking place there. Hope everyone enjoyed the inauguration today, and see you tonight in New York at Stranger Than Fiction for The Education of Shelby Knox.

indieWIRE:
Responding To Prop 8: Cooper, Rich Defend Sundance and the People of Utah

Thompson on Hollywood:
Sundance Update: Tyson, Directors, IFC Day-and-Date

Stranger Than Fiction Blog:
Journalist Kristof and Power speak at Sundance

Cinematech:
Some Big Questions for 2009 (in response to Sunday's panel, 'Models & Experiments in Indie Distribution' )

New York Times:
Sundance Dispatch: Inside the Church of Independent Film

The WIP (Women's International Perspective):
Sundance Day 4: Celebrity Is a Funny Thing

CNet News:
At Sundance, Web pioneers see 'on-demand revolution'

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

Independent Film Week - State of Film Festivals - Sept. 15, 2008

State of Film Festivals
Independent Film Week
Monday, September 15, 2008
5:30-7pm
FIT – Haft Auditorium – New York, NY




Monday at Independent Film Week, IFP Executive Director Michelle Byrd moderated the State of Film Festivals discussion with Christian Gaines and Geoff Gilmore. Below is an edited transcript of the main points brought out in the discussion.

Moderator:
Michelle Byrd, IFP

Panelists:
Christian Gaines, Sundance Film Festival
Geoff Gilmore, withoutabox

Byrd: Can you talk about the different sections in Sundance and the process for acceptance into the festival?

Gilmore: The Sundance Film Festival has three different arenas. The competitions are four of them: two international and two domestic and documentary and dramatic. The American dramatic competition has to be a world premiere. We picked 16 films in each of those two sections out of somewhere in the neighborhood of 1,500 dramatic submissions and somewhere around 1,000 documentary submissions. The international competition needs to be a U.S. premiere. It started four years ago. In addition, we have a premiere section which tends to be that section of the festival which has higher visibility in terms of the fact that there’s more prominent directors, sometimes some that already have distribution. We have a section that’s kind of a catch all section called Spectrum where films that have not already had world premieres play internationally or domestic. There’s an enormous mythology about how festivals choose programs. A number of people have told me that a sales agent has told a filmmaker that they met Geoff Gilmore and it could get into Sundance…all I can do is role my eyes and say sure and come back and say that’s fine…what the real truth is basically it’s submitted and we look at it. We have an honestly intelligent staff who works their asses off looking at every single film that gets submitted to the film festival. We debate what gets into the festival. We debate what should be in different sections. Ultimately the choice if it gets into the Sundance Film Festival is made by one person, which is me for features. The shorts are chosen by Trevor Groth?? and a group of people. The questions that people have so often in what we’re looking for…that’s why it’s so difficult to talk about the process, because we’re not looking for simple things. There’s maybe 20 different reasons why a film plays at Sundance. It may be a question of its content. It may be a question of its originality. It may be a question of its distinction as a genre film. It may be an experimental work. There’s a lot of different kinds of films. All I can really say to you is don’t make a decision as to what you think we’re looking for. Don’t make your decision as to what you think a Sundance film is because it’s quite a spectrum. The idea that we actually have a certain kind of an agenda is the opposite. If I’m an agenda, I’m not going to pick up on the films that are coming from you guys, because that’s my agenda to pick movies as opposed to literally what comes right to me. In order for us to respond to the range of work that’s been given to us, I want my staff to be as open as possible. I’m not trying to pick films that are commercial. I’m not trying to pick films that get sold.

Byrd: You recently left AFI. Can you talk about the various festivals under the AFI banner and their festival selection processes?

Gaines: The submission process for larger festivals in the U.S. and around the world are fairly similar with some modifications. Their job is to methodically go through these films and to have the cream rise to the surface. Obviously incredibly to do with thousands of submissions, but methodically speaking, many programmers that work on the process, they look at films, they grade them, they review them, they comment on them. They urge other festival programmers to look at them. Sometimes to specific festival programmers that respond to this kind of work. It’s a constant narrowing process. It’s also worth mentioning there’s a certain general misconception that there’s huge pile of films and putting all the good ones on one side and the bad ones on another side. It’s not as simple as that. There are sections are different sections and criteria. It’s worth knowing what festival submission criteria are. It’s worth knowing that Toronto doesn’t show shorts outside of Canadian shorts, for example. Pay attention to those kinds of criteria. Pay attention to the process.

Gilmore: I can’t tell you how many times someone’s walked up and say, do you watch all the movies? It’s confusing to me. How do you think we select them? Do you watch them the whole way through. In most of the cases, yes. It’s our job to look at your work and be open job. It’s not our job to sit on high and anointed. It doesn’t work that way.

Byrd: How do you make decision about which one is best? What’s the role of the film festival?

Gilmore: I make the distinction of festivals that are markets and festivals that aren’t. There are festivals with formal markets like Cannes. There’s festivals like Sundance that are an informal market. A lot that goes on at Cannes is not about the buying new feature films. It’s pre-buying films at the script stage. The pre-buying market at Cannes is far more important than the issue of buying the film out of the competition. The other festivals, each of them have their own roles. One has to unfortunately has to make these decisions not by yourself hopefully but with some real advice on the best places to go. I just came from Toronto. One of the great film festivals in the world, but it pisses me off because they show 300+ pictures. Essentially what that means is 150 films that go to Toronto are disappearing year. It’s bad for anybody who’s trying to pay attention to all the films in the program. Toronto is a very difficult festival to sell, because it’s more of a launch festival than a sale festival. It’s one of the best public festivals in the world. The people who go to Toronto are real people. I think what you want to do is get your film in front of real people and get buyers at that screening.

Gaines: There’s a big difference a guy or a gal who has a film and puts their next film out there and suddenly thinks of themselves as filmmaker in the long run. I would just really dissuade that notion. There’s so much to be learned from establishing relationships with people…just people who are of your community. Film festivals are places where you can develop and deepen your pool of comrades, colleagues. You can’t underestimate that. The treasured treat of having your film seen in front of people that aren’t your family and friends and having your film be reacted to who aren’t you or like you is a real pleasure and growing experience. Being able to get press and publicity in all kinds of places other than huge media environments. All these things are part of the things that are going to deepen your understand of the industry and put you in a much better position if an agent comes along.

Byrd: Do you have any idea how many festivals there are in the U.S.?


Gaines: 700 million.

Gilmore: Not far along. There’s a difference between the top tier festivals that are maybe 7 or 8 in the world, and another set of really important regional festivals which are one step down. The strategy of how you to decide which to go to is one of the most important that you make.

Gaines: You can’t throw a rock without hitting a film festival in the U.S. It’s up to a filmmaker to do their due diligence and have a buyer beware approach. There’s nothing wrong with a lot of film festivals. In fact, it’s a very good thing in part because film festivals become an ad hoc distribution outlet for films that will otherwise never be seen. The revenue model that exists behind it is still uncertain. It’s true that festivals still have this U.S./World Premiere competitiveness. My general feeling about that is that so many films are unattainable to most festivals because great films that aren’t being considered by U.S. distributors coming out of Cannes, a lot of those films will never see the light of day in an American film festival, which is a real shame. Right after Cannes, it’s not unusual for a sales agent to get three or four hundred invitations from festivals from around the world saying we want to share that film. Something’s got to change in terms of how they can be seen.

Byrd: What do you think Sundance will be like 10 years from and thinking about the climate for independent film? Everybody’s been reading all the press about ‘The Sky is Falling.’ What can you imagine the festival becoming?

Gilmore: Two years ago Sundance had about $15 million worth of films. Last year, that number was a quarter. The theatrical marketplace for independent features is not at it’s best moment. Why? I don’t know. I have lots of answers. Maybe it’s ultimately the movies. Maybe it’s what drives specialized films is changing. Coen Bros. film lead the weekend. Some people don’t even consider that to be independent anymore. More films got distributed theatrically last year than any time since the 1950s. It’s my standard joke, and it’s not so funny that the issue of finding visibility and distribution for work has become the function of film festivals, which I think is bad. I think the cultural and aesthetic function of festivals, the showcasing and experimentation, the work that festivals do cannot be reduced by this kind of business. We have to figure out what the distribution mechanisms will become. I do believe that technology at festivals is going to evolve. I do believe that the generation of filmmakers growing up now have a much better way of dealing with alternative distribution. Whether or not festivals have cyber space sections. Whether or not that cyber space section helps market a film or gives it visibility. Those are really good questions right now. On-the-ground events and cyber space events have to work together.

Byrd: The film “Sugar” that played at Sundance, if you were to see it on a third screen in cyber space, what would it take for Sundance to take that leap?

Gilmore: If don’t just put it on the net and say let’s watch it. You make it a special event. We’re going to work these things out, because it’s not been done. The bad news with what’s going on with festivals right now, festivals are too long, too crowded, their overwhelmed by people who want their faces to be photographed. They’re overwhelmed by agents who want to showcase their work. There’s too much mediocrity at festivals. What used to be exciting about festivals was, ‘that was a fucking great film,’ not ‘how much do you think it’s going to make?’ The question of how much is a film going to make cannot be what drives film festivals over the next decade.

Gaines: I’d like to add on to what Geoff was saying about why film festivals suck. There are so many different constituents now who converge onto film festivals who desire a different experience. All of those different people are essential for the survival of the festivals. Corporate sponsors and the media. So many festivals start now for reasons that are outreach projects for larger cultural institutions. They’re the film commission’s baby. All these different institutions desire different outcomes. It ultimately takes away the treasured dignity of having your film seen in the best possible picture and sound, best possible environment in an enhanced way. As far as the future of film festivals, I always have this image of a rock t-shirt, but instead of the rock band in front, it’s the name of the film and on the back, it’s a list of all the films it played at and that’s it’s theatrical distribution and each one of the places there was an economic model that worked.

Byrd: Can you talk about withoutabox?

Gaines: Withoutabox was founded in 2000. Designed to provide self-distribution tools for filmmakers. It’s the ability for filmmakers to submit to many film festivals in a simple and intuitive way to track the submissions and make sense of the submission process. In January, the company was bought by IMDB. Through IMDB and its parent company Amazon’s various online and DVD distribution devices, will be over the course of the next few years, developing the ability to offer WAB filmmakers to be able to distribute their film either online as a pay-per-view format or a streaming format on IMDB. WAB is a huge aggregated mass of right holders. We’re trying to offer non-exclusive opportunities, so watch this space for future developments.

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Sunday, January 27, 2008

2008 Sundance Award Winners

2008 Sundance Award Winners

Last night, the jury and audience award-winners of the 2008 Sundance Film Festival were announced at the Sundance Film Festival’s closing Awards Ceremony hosted by William H. Macy.

And the awards went to...

The Grand Jury Prize: Documentary - TROUBLE THE WATER

The Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic - FROZEN RIVER

The World Cinema Jury Prize: Documentary - MAN ON WIRE/United Kingdom

The World Cinema Jury Prize: Dramatic - KING OF PING PONG (PING PONGKINGEN)/ Sweden

The Audience Award: Documentary - to FIELDS OF FUEL

The Audience Award: Dramatic - THE WACKNESS

The World Cinema Audience Award: Documentary - MAN ON WIRE/United Kingdom

The World Cinema Audience Award: Dramatic - CAPTAIN ABU RAED/Jordan

The Directing Award: Documentary - Nanette Burstein/AMERICAN TEEN

The Directing Award: Dramatic - Lance Hammer/BALLAST

The World Cinema Directing Award: Documentary -Nino Kirtadze/DURAKOVO: VILLAGE OF FOOLS (DURAKOVO: LE VILLAGE DES FOUS)/ France.

The World Cinema Directing Award: Dramatic - Anna Melikyan/MERMAID (RUSALKA)/ Russia.

The Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award - Alex Rivera and David Riker/SLEEP DEALER.

The World Cinema Screenwriting Award - Samuel Benchetrit/I ALWAYS WANTED TO BE A GANGSTER (J'AI TOUJOURS RÊVÉ D'ÊTRE UN GANGSTER)/ France

The Documentary Editing Award - Joe Bini/ROMAN POLANSKI: WANTED AND DESIRED

The World Cinema Documentary Editing Award - Irena Dol/THE ART STAR AND THE SUDANESE TWINS/New Zealand

The Excellence in Cinematography Award: Documentary - Phillip Hunt and Steven Sebring/PATTI SMITH: DREAM OF LIFE

The Excellence in Cinematography Award: Dramatic - Lol Crawley/BALLAST

The World Cinema Cinematography Award: Documentary - al Massad/RECYCLE /Jordan

The World Cinema Cinematography Award: Dramatic - Askild Vik Edvardsen for KING OF PING PONG (PING PONGKINGEN)/ Sweden

A World Cinema Special Jury Prize: Dramatic - Ernesto Contreras/BLUE EYELIDS (PÁRPADOS AZULES)/ Mexico

A Special Jury Prize: Documentary - Lisa F. Jackson/GREATEST SILENCE: RAPE IN THE CONGO

A Special Jury Prize: Dramatic, The Spirit of Independence - Chusy Haney-Jardine/ANYWHERE, USA

A Special Jury Prize: Dramatic, Work by an Ensemble Cast - The cast of CHOKE.

The 2008 Jury Prize in Short Filmmaking was awarded to two films: MY OLYMPIC SUMMER, directed by Daniel Robin, and SIKUMI (On the Ice), directed by Andrew Okpeaha MacLean.

The jury also presented the International Jury Prize in International Short Filmmaking to SOFT, directed by Simon Ellis. Honorable Mentions in Short Filmmaking were presented to: Aquarium, directed by Rob Meyer; August 15th, directed by Xuan Jiang; La Corona (The Crown), directed by Amanda Micheli and Isabel Vega; Oiran Lyrics, directed by Ryosuke Ogawa; Spider, directed by Nash Edgerton; Suspension, directed by Nicolas Provost, and W. , directed by The Vikings.

SLEEP DEALER, directed by Alex Rivera, is the recipient of this year’s Alfred P. Sloan Prize.

Sundance Institute and NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) on Thursday announced the winners of the 2008 Sundance/NHK International Filmmakers Awards. The winning filmmakers and projects for 2008 are Alejandro Fernandez Almendras from Chile with HUACHO; Braden King from the United States, with HERE; Aiko Nagatsu from Japan, with APOPTOSIS; and Radu Jude from Romania, with THE HAPPIEST GIRL IN THE WORLD.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Sundance Panel News On the Half Shell

The 2008 Sundance Film Festival is approximately at its half-way mark today. Here's a couple of tidbits from the festival panels so far that I found while surfing the net.

Strike Panel:
EW.com

Webolution Panel:
CNet

Film Church Panel:
Deseret Morning News

Women in Film Panel:
Cinematical

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Friday, January 18, 2008

"The Seminar with Robert McKee" Trailer to Be Shown at PGA Sundance Producers Lab Screening Series

Bradley Glenn, director/producer of the feature documentary The Seminar with Robert McKee, informed me that there will be a launch party for the Producer’s Guild of America Sundance Producers Lab Screening series on Wednesday, January 23 at the Stella Artois House in Park City, Utah. I have viewed the trailer myself and it looks like this will be quite an incredible documentary.

The trailer for The Seminar with Robert McKee will screen at the party. The doc follows the brazen career of screenwriting guru Robert McKee. A polarizing figure, people either worship his every word or despise his teachings. How did a guy who has never had a screenplay produced actually get to this point? Follow his path to becoming the top screenwriting teacher through shooting his first ever produced screenplay Madness with controversial director Tony Kaye. He is a success on paper, but can he be a success on the big screen? Executive Produced by Richard Lorber, directed by Bradley Glenn, produced by Rachel Klein.

View the trailer at http://www.pgalab.producersguild.org/pgalab/ and film website http://seminarthemovie.com/theseminar.html.

And to vote for the trailer, create a profile (name, email addy) on LiveVideo.com, which is hosting the trailer series online here.

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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Volunteer Notetakers sought to cover Sundance/Slamdance panels

Volunteer Notetakers sought to cover Sundance/Slamdance panels

If you will be in Park City at all for either the Sundance or the Slamdance film festivals, and plan to attend any of the panel discussions there and would like to volunteer as a notetaker, please let me know, and I will add you as a Contributing Notetaker on right here on The Film Panel Notetaker.

If interested, please email me at brian at thefilmpanelnotetaker dot com to confirm your interest, and I'll set you up with blog access. You must already have your own festival pass in order to attend the panels.

When adding your notes to the blog, please be sure to include the title of the panel discussion and the names of the moderator and panelists, as well as your notes, of course :)

Also, please try to include hyperlinks to some or most of the people, films, companies, etc., you mention in your blog post.

And here's links to the panels from which to choose....
- Sundance
- Slamdance (Within the film schedule)

And in case you would prefer sending me in your videos from the panels, in lieu of notes, you may also do that.

Thanks for your consideration!

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Friday, December 21, 2007

A Plethora of Panels Planned for Sundance

Today, I received my Sundance '08 Film Guide in the mail. In addition to listing all of the films in and out of competition, several pages are devoted to highlighting film panels that will take place in and around Park City. Among these panels are Webolution! - Hollywood Adapts to the Web, Doug Liman: "Sharing a Vision" and the Importance of Finding the Right Editor and On Plurality: The Middle East in Perspective.

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Thursday, November 29, 2007

2008 Sundance Out-of-Competition Films Announced

More news out of Park City today. Sundance Institute announced today the lineup of films screening at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival in the out-of-competition sections of Premieres, Spectrum, New Frontier, and Park City at Midnight. Read the list here.

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