Welcome to Filmmaker’s final issue of 2019, which continues something of a new tradition: our Sound and Visionaries section, where we spotlight six below-the-line artists in the awards conversation whose work particularly impressed us. And, accompanying these profiles are three short essays, all by writers new to the print magazine—Mark Asch, Tim Grierson and Beatrice Loayza—that look at 2019 in film through the psychic currents and generational anxieties it mined. There’s a lot elsewhere. On the cover is Josh and Benny Safdie’s Uncut Gems, a wild adrenaline rush of a movie whose major-league ambition is especially exciting for me as […]
by Scott Macaulay on Dec 10, 2019The times, they keep a-changin’. In its immediate aftermath, the story out of Sundance 2019 was its bounteous acquisition market and record-setting sales numbers—from New Line’s $15 million purchase of Blinded by the Light to Amazon Studios’ $27 million splurge on Late Night and Brittany Runs a Marathon. By the summer, a different narrative began to emerge. While these top acquisition titles earned millions of dollars at the box office, they all still under-performed in theatrical release. Then, Amazon Studios’ veteran head of theatrical distribution Bob Berney left the company, a departure that potentially signaled shifting priorities at what had […]
by Anthony Kaufman on Dec 10, 2019“I think one of the things I am most concerned about is how we interact with space in a bodily way,” says LA-based video and VR artist Kate Parsons, who will co-teach an undergraduate studio class, “The Inner Reaches of Outer Space,” next spring at ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, California, with VR veteran Ben Vance. The pair was asked to teach in the Immersion Lab by professors Jenny Rodenhouse, a faculty member in the graduate Media Design Practice (MDP) program, and Maggie Hendrie, chair of Interaction Design. Parsons, who teaches a basic video production course for first-year graduate […]
by Holly Willis on Dec 10, 2019Two major anniversaries in digital technology happened in 2019. October 29th marked the fiftieth year since the first message was transmitted via ARPANET, an early network of computers developed by the U.S. Department of Defense and hosted at universities including UCLA and Stanford (where the message was, respectively, sent and received)—a relatively pat and mutually agreed upon milestone for the beginning of the internet as we know it. The other anniversary—the thirtieth birthday of the World Wide Web—is much less decisive: You might notice people celebrating the thirtieth year of the internet’s most transformative application well into 2021. A quick […]
by Joanne McNeil on Dec 10, 2019