[New Frontier Performances and Installations] When it comes to shooting one is faced with endless decisions. I make them like when playing a computer game or making music — really quick and without too much thinking. I make up my mind really fast just so I won’t lose my cool with my crew. Afterward I think, “What the hell was that decision?” But then in retrospect it usually works out well. Instinct is the only thing an artist can truly trust when it comes to those decisions. If the vision is clear then instinct will follow.
When I was first approached to blog for Filmmaker, I thought: “I’m too new at this to say anything anyone would want to read.” It turns out that my naiveté and fresh perspective are the very things that Scott was looking for. So here goes… My name is Ron Simons (commonly misspelled Simon or Simmons), and I’m producer of the film Night Catches Us, which premieres in the Dramatic Competition at Sundance 2010. I am new to the field of indie films as a producer as this is my first film. What a trip so far! At every stage of […]
I’m trying to keep the blog Sundance/Park City/Slamdance-focused for the next ten days, but I want to take note of the new New York film tax incentive regulations proposed in Governor Patterson’s new budget. From Georg Szalai’s article in the Hollywood Reporter: New York film and TV industry executives on Tuesday lauded Gov. David Paterson’s budget proposal that includes $420 million per year in state money for the continuation of a 30% tax credit for productions in the Empire State through 2014. The governor’s 2010-11 budget proposal calls for spending cuts in various areas but for production incentives worth $420 […]
Announced today, YouTube, which is sponsoring the Sundance Film Festival‘s NEXT section, is partnering with the fest to make five festival films (three from this year, two from ’09) available for rental on YouTube starting this Friday. The five films will be:Louis Psihoyos‘s The CoveTze Chun‘s Children of InventionMichael Mohan‘s One Too Many MorningsBrad & Todd Barnes‘s HomewreckerLinas Phillips‘s Bass Ackwards The films are only available during the festival for a three-day rental price of $3.99. The deal is a non-exclusive revenue share deal between YouTube and the filmmakers. YouTube has also announced the start of “Filmmakers Wanted.” A campaign […]
[New Frontier Performances and Installations] The Cloud Mirror is a technological exploration of how our online standards of privacy and tact contrast so dramatically with those standard in the real world. When building The Cloud Mirror, I had to consider whether I felt comfortable taking people’s information from Facebook and Twitter and splashing it on their faces in a real public space for all to see. I found I felt uncomfortable with invading people’s privacy in this way, even though they themselves had made the information public. In fact I discovered people who post their “relationship status”” publicly on Facebook […]
When I started out script supervising almost 20 years ago, the tools of the trade were a stopwatch, a pen or pencil, paper, a Polaroid camera and that all important bible, the script. Each script supervisor had his or her own idiosyncratic system for “maintaining continuity” of a film or a TV show, but walk on any set and the basic tools were all the same. Maybe you typed up your notes at the end of the night on, yes, a typewriter; maybe you didn’t. Well the tools have now gone digital, thanks in large part to script supervisor Anthony […]
The first non-Canadian film to open the Toronto film festival in quite some time, Jon Amiel’s Creation seems to both embrace and shun the duties and limitations of the historical biopic. Paul Bettany stars as middle age naturalist Charles Darwin, well past his explorations on the HMS Beagle, who having settled into English country life with his children and wife Emma (Bettany’s real life spouse Jennifer Connelly), decides to finally tackle writing a book on his nascent theory of Evolution. Haunted by visions of his recently deceased daughter and the notion that he may permanently alter man’s conception of the […]
As we pack our bags for the Sundance Film Festival, all of our correspondents this year have weighed in on the premieres that we’re most excited to see. Check back daily throughout the festival for features, reviews and commentary. 3 Backyards, Eric Mendelsohn. (pictured) I’ve heard from crew who worked on this that it’s great, and I’m a Judy Berlin fan. It’s a domestic drama with Edie Falco and Elias Koteas, and I really hope this is a film that can get suburban-disconnectedness — the bread of butter of Sundance movies — right. — Alicia Van Couvering The Company Man, […]
Head over to our page dedicated to all things Park City. For the next week and a half there you’ll find features on films screening at the fest, on-site coverage of the news and trends this year, answers from filmmakers attending this year to our question: “What was the hardest decision you had to make to complete your film.” And much more.
From the online store of Mike Mohan’s One Too Many Mornings, playing in the Next section of Sundance. Are you an acquisitions executive at Focus, Miramax, Fox Searchlight, Sony Pictures Classics, IFC, or Magnolia? Or are you just an independently wealthy entrepreneur that wants to get into theatrical distribution? The first person to click this button will get the rights to theatrically distribute our film across the USA. **Purchaser also agrees to pay for all legal fees and deliverables that the filmmakers may incur. You need an Amex, Visa, Master card, Discover, or a PayPal account that can handle the […]