Monday, January 23, 2012

Film School Online | "Oscar watch: Why you should care about the ACE film-editing awards"

By: Mike Scott, The Times-Picayune
Source: http://www.nola.com
Category: Film School Online


For anyone serious about filling out their office Oscar pool, it's not exceedingly difficult to correctly predict a majority of the Big Six Oscar categories. That's because the sheer number of pre-Oscar awards that mirror those categories make it easy to see which films and actors have momentum and support. Where an Oscar pool is won and lost is in the below-the-line categories -- those technical categories that don't get nearly as much ink. You know, categories like best sound, best score -- and best editing.

But here's a little secret: Of all the pre-Oscar awards, the American Cinema Editors' Eddie Awards are among the most valuable to watch, and for a couple of reasons. First, because history shows us that Oscar's eventual Best Picture winner is all but guaranteed to be among the films nominated in one of ACE's three major theatrical categories (dramatic, comedy or musical, animation). What's more, it's never been a film from the animated category. So there are clues to be had there.

Also, though, in the 12 years between 2000 and 2011, one of the winners in the three major ACE categories has won the best-editing Oscar an impressive 11 times. So if, when filling out your Oscar pool, you know which film won the Eddie Awards, you've got a leg up on the poor slobs who call themselves your competition.

All this is just a very, very wordy wind-up to say this: The 2012 ACE Eddie Awards nominations have been released. Find them below. The awards themselves will be handed out Feb. 18 -- a week before the 84th annual Academy Awards.

Source: http://www.nola.com/movies/index.ssf/2012/01/oscar_watch_why_you_should_car.html

Film School Online | "Guggenheim Presents New Works in Film, Video, Sound by South Asian Artist"

By: BWW News Desk
Source: http://broadwayworld.com
Category: Film School Online


The Deutsche Bank Series at the Guggenheim: Being Singular Plural, the first exhibition of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum to focus exclusively on artistic production in South Asia, presents new film, video, and sound-based works by seven of the most innovative and visionary contemporary artists, filmmakers, and media practitioners living and working in India today.

This exhibition marks the first time that these artists will be showing work in a North American museum and is assembled as part of the Guggenheim’s global Asian Art Program. Being Singular Plural is organized by Sandhini Poddar, Associate Curator, Asian Art, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and will be on view March 2 through June 6, 2012.

This exhibition is made possible by Deutsche Bank.

Expanding on its original 2010 Deutsche Guggenheim presentation, the exhibition presents eight projects dispersed among the museum’s Annex galleries, New Media Theater, and outdoors along the exterior ramp leading from Fifth Avenue down to the Sackler Center for Arts Education. The New York installation continues to focus on researching and co-producing new work with its community of practitioners: Desire Machine Collective (Sonal Jain and Mriganka Madhukaillya), Shumona Goel and Shai Heredia, Amar Kanwar, and Kabir Mohanty and Vikram Joglekar.

According to Ms. Poddar, “This group of artists and filmmakers all draw inspiration from their experiences in South Asia, but a closer reading of their work reveals a transnational context that highlights some of the most significant political events, aesthetic forms, and critical theories defining contemporary culture today. While recent exhibitions of contemporary art from India have celebrated finished works as end products and often contextualized them in light of the country’s economic boom and strong art market, the works in Being Singular Plural assert the quieter principles of practice, process, and perception.”

Philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy’s notion of “being singular plural” provides the exhibition’s structural framework and intellectual scaffolding. Created with a profound recognition of the interconnectedness of all beings, the selected films, videos, and sound installations invite visitors to reassess conventional boundaries between such categories as fact and fiction, art and cinema, the still and moving image, and objectivity and subjectivity. By manipulating sound, image, and text in experimental ways, the artists in Being Singular Plural explore the social possibilities within the technology of these mediums. The works posit new modes of phenomenological and physiological address for the viewer, shifting these positions from passive spectatorship to active participation.

Desire Machine Collective (Sonal Jain and Mriganka Madhukaillya), whose name derives from the philosophical writing of Gilles Deleuze and FĂ©lix Guattari, seeks to redirect attention toward careful looking, watching, and listening. Jain and Madhukaillya have been working collaboratively since 2004 to examine the roles that moving images play in recording social histories and investigating the limits of these roles. In 2007 they established Periferry 1.0, an ongoing migratory artists’ project using a government-leased ferry docked on the Brahmaputra River in the heart of Guwahati, the duo’s hometown, in northeast India. At the Guggenheim, the collective will install a site-specific interactive sound piece, Trespassers Will (Not) Be Prosecuted (2012), as a round-the-clock public artwork outside the museum inspired by sounds collected in a sacred forest. The exhibition will also include two new moving-image projects by Desire Machine Collective in the Annex galleries: Residue (2011), a 35 mm work filmed in an abandoned power plant on the outskirts of Guwahati, and Nishan (2007– ), a meditative four-channel video installation shot in the city of Srinagar in Kashmir, the contested state that lies on the political fault line between India and Pakistan.

Shumona Goel’s films investigate the stories of people who often go unheard or events that go unwitnessed. For Being Singular Plural, she and co-director Shai Heredia present I am micro (2011), a 35 mm black-and-white film that celebrates small-scale independent filmmaking and collaboration while conveying their fragility. The images in the film are culled from two different sources—a film shoot around National Instruments Limited (NIL), a now defunct Kolkata-based company that was once involved in the design, manufacture, and development of opto-mechanical and opto-electronic instruments, and behind-the-scenes footage from the set of filmmaker Ashim Ahluwalia’s latest fiction film, Miss Lovely (2012). The film includes a voiceover by director and screenwriter Kamal Swaroop, whose debut film Om Dar-B-Dar (1988) initially reached wide acclaim but quickly fell into obscurity.

Source: http://broadwayworld.com/article/Guggenheim-Presents-New-Works-in-Film-Video-Sound-by-South-Asian-Artists-20120123#

Film School Online | "Jan de Bont returns to directing with a remake of the 1961 Johnny Cash drama Five Minutes to Live"

By: George Merchan
Source: http://www.joblo.com
Category: Film School Online


Director (SPEED, TWISTER) and former cinematographer (DIE HARD, BASIC INSTINCT) Jan de Bont had been locked away in director jail for years now thanks to a string of very poopy films that included SPEED 2: CRUISE CONTROL, THE HAUNTING, and TOMB RAIDER: THE CRADLE OF LIFE. He's about to be let out though, and Deadline reports that his first film in about a decade will be a remake of the Johnny Cash-starring 1961 drama FIVE MINUTES TO LIVE.

The film, to be written by TV movie and DTV scribe Raul Inglis, will follow the original film closely as it tells the story of "two men as they execute a terrifying bank robbery. One guy holds the bank manager's wife hostage and the other tells the manager she'll be killed in five minutes unless he transfers money to an account of their choosing."

FIVE MINUTES TO LIVE is being brought to life by producers Joseph and Jack Nasser, both of whom currently have the film FOR A GOOD TIME, CALL... premiering at Sundance this year. Casting is said to be starting immediately.

Source: http://www.joblo.com/movie-news/jan-de-bont-returns-to-directing-with-a-remake-of-the-1961-johnny-cash-drama-five-minutes-to-live

Film School Online | "George Clooney uses directing trick to set pace on film set"

By: Jordan Graber
Source: http://blog.chron.com
Category: Film School Online


George Clooney has given away one of his directing secrets in a newspaper interview, revealing the first scene he shoots for a movie never makes it into the final cut.

The movie star has opened up to the Los Angeles Times during a roundtable chat with fellow filmmakers Martin Scorsese, Alexander Payne, Michel Hazanavicius and Stephen Daldry, and admits there’s a trick he uses at the start of filming that lets his cast and crew know he means business.

Clooney, who is among those being considered for a Best Director Oscar nomination for his work on The Ides of March, admits he picked up the idea from legendary moviemaker Sidney Lumet.

He says, “You set up the first day, the first shot, something you will never use in the film. And the crew’s there and you go, ‘Ready, action’. They do the first take. You go, ‘Cut, print, moving on’. And everybody in the crew just sits up.”

Clooney admits the trick helps him get the best out of his actors.

He adds, “For me as an actor, if someone does that to me, if you think you’re going to do 30 takes, you sort of tank it in the first five or six because you figure they’re not going to print it.

“You’ve got to be on, and it’s funny how you feel everybody kind of sit up in their seat.”

Source: http://blog.chron.com/celebritybuzz/2012/01/george-clooney-uses-directing-trick-to-set-pace-on-film-set/

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Film School Online | "Lisburn school’s video is an online hit"

By: News Letter
Source:
http://www.newsletter.co.uk
Category: Film School Online

A VIDEO posted on the internet to promote a Lisburn school is proving to be an online phenomenon.

Since the quirky musical film – produced by pupils at Friends’ School – went on the YouTube website last Friday it has recorded over 100,000 hits as viewers seek to catch a glimpse of the masterpiece.
The video – recorded using only a digital camera – is also generating positive feedback with hundreds of favourable comments from around the world.In the film, a new first year pupil tells her mother of her apprehension ahead of her first day at the Co Antrim school, before walking into the main building.
As the doors open, she is then greeted by a scene of euphoria as hundreds of fellow students and teachers sing and dance their way through a maze of corridors.The unique ensemble also features pupils engaging in unicycling, gymnastics and roller-skating as others showcase the activities on offer at the school.
Viewers then watch the school choir singing in the assembly hall before the room erupts with pupils dancing in a mad frenzy.To end the video – which includes the soundtrack of classic US sitcom Friends – participants form the school’s initials, FSL, on the outside playing fields.The brainchild of the project, PE teacher Stephen Robinson, admitted yesterday the response to the online initiative had been “very surreal”.He revealed he came up with the concept last year having watched a promotional video produced by a Canadian university.“We did a couple of videos in the past couple of years but we wanted to do something slightly different and aim it towards new pupils,” he told the News Letter.After gaining approval from the headmaster and presenting his idea to pupils in October, a committee was then formed to decide the video’s content.Paying tribute to pupils for their involvement, Mr Robinson said: “I have to admit the night before I was nervous because I wasn’t sure how it was going to work out.“But they basically outdone themselves on the final day and final take – it was just astonishing.”The teacher expressed his amazement at the online response, revealing he has received positive comments from as far away as Australia and America.He also refused to rule out future school videos, admitting he had a “few ideas” up his sleeve.Mr Robinson was assisted in his project by former pupil, Matt Good, 18, who was responsible for filming the video last month. Friends’ principal Elizabeth Dickson, who herself participated in the recording, praised all those involved.“I think the way the video turned out shows the community at the school,” she said.There is a tremendous sense of friendship and very good relationships between the pupils and members of staff.”Among those giving their support to the internet sensation was DUP MP Jeffrey Donaldson. In a message on website Twitter he congratulated those behind the “excellent video on Friends’ School”.Former pupil and current Ulster and Ireland rugby star, Stephen Ferris, also posted his approval.He said: “A must watch on YouTube – FSL LipDub. My old school.”

Source: http://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/local/lisburn_school_s_video_is_an_online_hit_1_3425778

Film School Online | "Vancouver Film School offering Women in Games scholarship"

By: Eric Caoili
Source:
http://www.gamasutra.com
Category: Film School Online

Vancouver Film School will offer its Women In Games Scholarship for the fourth year in a row, which will pay the full tuition for an aspiring female game designer to attend its Game Design program.
The scholarship is designed to encourage more women to enter the male-dominated video game industry. Males currently command around 89 percent of the video game workforce in the United States, according to the volunteer respondents from our own Salary Survey last year.
Previous recipients of the scholarship (valued at $49,250) include designers who've gone on to work at developers like Microsoft's BigPark studio (Kinect Joy Ride) and Digido Interactive (MotionMaze). Graduates of the program have worked on titles such as Deus Ex: Human Revolution, Dead Rising 2, Prototype 2, and Star Wars: The Old Republic.
Vancouver Film School will provide application details for the scholarship at its free Game Design Open House on January 22, which takes place during the school's three-day Game Design Expo. The annual conference is open to "game industry professionals, students of game design, and everyone passionate about games."
Other companies will also provide information on their respective game industry-supported scholarships for both men and women at Vancouver Film School's open house, including G4TechTV ($7,000), Radical Entertainment ($2,500), Slant Six Games ($2,500), Annex Pro ($2,000), and BigPark ($1,000).
"Supporting the growth of women in games is something that I feel strongly about," says Vancouver Film School's Game Design head Dave Warfield. "It benefits the industry to gain new perspectives, creativity, and passion that is reflective of how gaming has changed and expanded in the past 5 years."

Source: http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/39706/Vancouver_Film_School_offering_Women_in_Games_scholarship.php

Film School Online | "The Los Angeles Film School Donates Fundraising Efforts to the International House of Blues Foundation"

By: Enhanced online news
Source:
http://eon.businesswire.com
Category: Film School Online

HOLLYWOOD, Calif.--(EON: Enhanced Online News)--The Los Angeles Film School is thrilled to donate just over $1,800 to the International House of Blues Foundation (IHOBF). The funds were raised in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day via Facebook; for every new “like” the school’s fan page received on Monday, one dollar was donated to IHOBF.
“We are delighted to make our contribution to this encouraging organization in the name of such an inspirational historic figure. As a school that is focused on coaching creativity through real world education, The Los Angeles Film School takes great pride in supporting the nourishment of art amongst our communities,” explained Diana Derycz-Kessler, President and CEO of The Los Angeles Film School.
Program Manager for the International House of Blues Foundation Nazanin Fatemian said, “Drawing upon the arts to explore and celebrate Dr. King’s life is a wonderful way to bring the community together to reflect upon the significance of the national holiday. It is our hope that participating youth are inspired by their participation in the International House of Blues Foundation (IHOBF) Annual Dr. King Celebration and Student Arts Exhibition to continue efforts to realize Dr. King’s dream for humanity. IHOBF appreciates the LA Film School’s support and their shared interest in honoring Dr. King.”
The International House of Blues Foundation® is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that provides arts and cultural programs to schools and communities. IHOBF was created in 1993 to support cultural diversity and creative expression through music and art.
Every year, the foundation celebrates the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. through competitions, projects and performances that focus on his commitment to social justice and equality for all people. The annual event was held today at The House of Blues on Sunset Blvd. in West Hollywood, CA, just a few miles west of The Los Angeles Film School’s campus.
About The Los Angeles Film School
The Los Angeles Film School, located in the heart of Hollywood, has been serving the community and its students since 1999. This accredited, VA-approved institution offers degrees in Computer Animation, Game Production, Recording Arts and Film. Its facilities include the historic RCA Building at 6363 Sunset Boulevard, and offers access to exceptional industry-standard equipment to its students.
Their faculty of industry professionals has earned credits on a number of major motion pictures, video games and albums. Numerous graduates have received awards at Independent Film Festivals worldwide, engineered multi-platinum albums, and some credits include GRAMMY awards and nominations. “We exude nothing but pride when speaking of our graduates. Their many awards and accomplishments are the result of our students’ hard work and dedication,” states Diana Derycz-Kessler, President and CEO of The Los Angeles Film School.
For more information about The Los Angeles Film School, please visit: http://www.lafilm.edu/ or call 323.860.0789.

Source: http://eon.businesswire.com/news/eon/20120119006566/en/los-angeles/hollywood/film

Film School Online | "Hagley makes film on African American education in Delaware available online"

By: Post Online
Source:
http://www.newarkpostonline.com
Category: Film School Online

Hagley Museum and Library announces that its film, A Separate Place: The Schools P.S. du Pont Built (2003), is available for viewing and downloading at www.hagley.org/separateplace/index.html. A Separate Place: The Schools P.S. du Pont Built presents the connection between Pierre S. du Pont's philanthropy and efforts by African Americans to obtain quality education in Delaware.
"The era of racial segregation is a deplorable episode in our nation's history," said Hagley staff member Roger Horowitz, one of the film's producers. "A Separate Place tells an uplifting story of how P. S. du Pont and the Black community in Delaware came together to create better education for young African Americans during those difficult times."
The voices of former students and teachers in the du Pont schools provide most of the film's content, supplemented by commentary from Dr. Jeanne Nutter, the film's executive producer and herself a product of a du Pont-built school. A shortened 25 minute version of A Separate Place, intended for elementary and middle school students, is available along with the full 53 minute film.
A Teacher's Guide, produced by Hagley's Education Department, may be viewed and downloaded from the website. The guide supplements the film, especially for school use, with documents from Hagley's research collections, such as before and after pictures of African American schools and letters from children to P.S. du Pont written in the 1920s.
Directed by Alonzo Crawford and edited by Kendrick Simmons, A Separate Place is a production of the Hagley Museum and Library. It was funded by the Longwood Foundation with partial support from the Delaware Humanities Forum, a state program of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Hagley.
The Hagley Library is the nation's leading business history library, archive, and research center. Current holdings comprise 37,000 linear feet in the Manuscripts and Archives Department, 290,000 printed volumes in the Imprints Department, 2 million visual items in the Pictorial Department, and more than 200,000 digital images and pages in the Digital Archives Department. Hagley's Center for the History of Business, Technology, and Society, which coordinated production of A Separate Place, offers conferences, research seminars, and a public lecture series, and operates a research grant program.
Hagley Museum and Library collects, preserves, and interprets the unfolding history of American enterprise. Hagley is located in Wilmington, Delaware. For more information, call 302-658-2400 weekdays or visit http://www.hagley.org/.

Source: http://www.newarkpostonline.com/features/article_f3ecb70c-456a-11e1-ab8f-001871e3ce6c.html

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Film School Online | "Disney Movie Marketing Chief Departs"

By: ERICA ORDEN
Source: http://online.wsj.com
Category: Film School Online


Walt Disney Co.'s head of world-wide movie marketing left the company after less than two years on the job, according to internal company emails.

A spokesman for Disney Studios confirmed the departure of MT Carney, who is set to return to New York, where she was previously a senior executive at Naked Communications, a marketing firm. Disney didn't immediately name a replacement.

For a major film studio's marketing chief, Ms. Carney lacked Hollywood experience. She was responsible not only for campaigns for Disney films but also for those from Disney's Pixar Animation Studios as well as for films from DreamWorks Studios, which Disney distributes.

Her tenure was highlighted by a few commercial hits such as "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" and "The Help"—expected to be a serious contender during awards season—but marred by box-office flops including "The Sorcerer's Apprentice."

Her departure comes on the cusp of the release of several important films for Disney, including "John Carter," the live-action science-fiction film set for release in March, and "The Avengers," the first Marvel Studios film distributed by Disney since it acquired Marvel in 2009.

In an email sent to employees, Disney Studios Chairman Rich Ross characterized the decision as Ms. Carney's, and praised her leadership for putting together "some of the most wide-reaching campaigns we have ever launched."

Ms. Carney said she plans to tend to her children in New York, according to a separate email she sent to staff. "It is terribly hard to leave," she wrote, "but I have been constantly torn between my kids and my job, and like all good Hollywood movies, the kids have to win."

Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203436904577151420234518122.html

Film School Online | "Oscar watch: Why you should care about the ACE film-editing awards"

By: Mike Scott, The Times-Picayune
Source: http://www.nola.com`
Category: Film School Online


For anyone serious about filling out their office Oscar pool, it's not exceedingly difficult to correctly predict a majority of the Big Six Oscar categories. That's because the sheer number of pre-Oscar awards that mirror those categories make it easy to see which films and actors have momentum and support.Where an Oscar pool is won and lost is in the below-the-line categories -- those technical categories that don't get nearly as much ink. You know, categories like best sound, best score -- and best editing.

But here's a little secret: Of all the pre-Oscar awards, the American Cinema Editors' Eddie Awards are among the most valuable to watch, and for a couple of reasons. First, because history shows us that Oscar's eventual Best Picture winner is all but guaranteed to be among the films nominated in one of ACE's three major theatrical categories (dramatic, comedy or musical, animation). What's more, it's never been a film from the animated category. So there are clues to be had there.

Also, though, in the 12 years between 2000 and 2011, one of the winners in the three major ACE categories has won the best-editing Oscar an impressive 11 times. So if, when filling out your Oscar pool, you know which film won the Eddie Awards, you've got a leg up on the poor slobs who call themselves your competition.

All this is just a very, very wordy wind-up to say this: The 2012 ACE Eddie Awards nominations have been released. Find them below. The awards themselves will be handed out Feb. 18 -- a week before the 84th annual Academy Awards.

Source: http://www.nola.com/movies/index.ssf/2012/01/oscar_watch_why_you_should_car.html

Film School Online | "Director Bringing Horror Film Shoot to Area"

By: Bob Pepalis
Source: http://cumming.patch.com
Category: Film School Online


Horror has come to the "wilds" in nearby Alpharetta. Actors and a film crew are setting up scenes for a Lawrenceville film and video producer's directorial debut.

Deronte Smith has written and is directing "Prosper," which he calls "Scream" meets "The Exorcist."

Originally from Campbellsville, KY, he's been producing films and working on smaller projects such as music videos, commercials and public service announcements for 12 years.

"I've been looking for the right project for my directorial debut," Smith said. "I decided over the summer, it seemed that the horror genre seemed to be the best platform to break in as a new director."

Smith said a multi-pronged distribution strategy is in place. He's working on securing a distribution deal with Relativity Media and another major distributor, with a DVD deal as a fallback.

"Prosper" is classed as an ultra-low budget film by SAG standards, which means it costs less than $250,000 to produce. How much below that is being kept private.

What he and his team are doing even before the film's principal shooting starts is aggressively building a promotional campaign online before the film's release, using help from the actors. He's trying to replicate the success patterns for "Blair Witch" and "Paranormal Activity."

"We've already developed a following on our Facebook page," Smith said two weeks after the Facebook page launched. The insights show "We've touched 45,000 people already."

Smith wants a premier at the Fox Theater.

The film has become a bit of a family affair for the property owners of the former horse farm where the film is being shot. Mike and Shari Staines first got involved when their son, Blake, auditioned for a role. He got a part in the film, and his mother emailed Smith that the family had always talked about their plantation style home being creepy, being so far back into the woods. Smith brought his location scout with him to their home, which is between Birmingham and Hopewell roads.

But not only is Blake and the home part of the film. Another son is serving as a snake wrangler. Smith saw the dozen snakes he had as pets, and that added another element to the film. When one of "Prosper's" lead actors turned out to be squeamish around snakes, he even got picked to be a body double.

Their daughter takes her turn as an extra, as an apparition in an exterior ghost scene.

The family's flock of Jacobs sheep, a primitive, multi-horned breed, have become part of the movie.

The 13 cast members and 26 company employees, including film crew, will be spending time in the area around the location shooting. The economic effect multiplies, Smith said, where "if the film is successful, folks want to come in and just be part of that area."

Want to become part of "Prosper?" The producers are seeking contributions through crowd sourcing, suggesting donations from $5 to $2,500. (I'm sure they'll take bigger contributions.) Make a top tier donation and you'll be in a major scene in the film. Or you can work for a day on set as an assistant. Even $5 will get you a downloadable copy of the film when it goes to DVD.

We've come to the end of the story, so you know what's next: the credits!

Cast: April Hollingsworth, Davien Harlis, Nicholas Wolfe, Shayla Love, Anastasia Pekhtereva, Walnette Santiago, Renier Cortes , Samme William, Diva Tyler, Garrick Parks, Susan D'Angelo, Addy Miller, Blake Cooper, Jade Nicolette

Producers: Deronte Smith, William Bearyman, Renonda Anderson, Chris Miller

Source: http://cumming.patch.com/articles/director-bringing-horror-film-shoot-to-area-prosper-is-a-georgia-production-that-uses-metro-atlanta-acting-talent-on-location-nearby

Film School Online | "Directing on a Dime: How to Get Your Short Film on the Big Screen"

By: Andy Young
Source: www.moviemaker.com
Category: Film School Online


Welcome to Directing on a Dime, where indie moviemaker Andy Young provides tips and insight for moviemakers whose budget is more The Blair Witch Project than Avatar. Have questions for Andy about low-budget (or no-budget) moviemaking? Ask away at andy@moviemaker.com.

We live in a world dominated by YouTube, where your short film has the potential to be seen by hundreds, thousands, even millions of people without you ever having to leave your living room. But what moviemaker dreams of one day getting “20,000 views” or seeing their movie on somebody’s iPhone? No, you want to see it on the big screen: Blown up, projected in a dark theater with booming sound and surrounded by the smell of popcorn as moviegoers file in to see your work. To many, this experience would be a dream come true, but making the dream into a reality can be intimidating. The price for renting a commercial theater screen, even for only an hour, can be astronomical. Fortunately, there are a still some great ways for moviemakers to get their short films on the silver screen:

Film Festivals
First, the good news: Because moviemaking is now so accessible that anyone can make a short film, there are hundreds of thousands of festivals held around the world that showcase short films! The bad news? Because movivemaking is now so accessible that anyone can make a short film, competition can be tough and the submission/acceptance ratio can be discouraging. However, most submission fees are fairly cheap (if not nonexistent), and even if your movie doesn’t make the cut, most festivals offer a discount on your attendance badge just for submitting. So even if you’re rejected, it’s always worth showing up to meet moviemakers, check out panels, build up your own buzz and, of course, see some great movies. I definitely recommend Fantastic Fest, SXSW and the Austin Film Festival if you’re planning on making a trip down to Austin, Texas.

College Campuses
Most universities, especially ones with an active film department, have some sort of regular screening/contest for student-made short films, or at the very least would let you check out a screening room for yours. Student-run festivals are by-and-large easier to get accepted into than mainstream festivals and can be a great opportunity to see some films by other young moviemakers—a.k.a., people you may want to work with in the near future. Also, be sure to subscribe to the film school’s newsletter. They’ll keep you updated on all the festivals, screenings, shoots and seminars you can get involved with.

But wait. This school-run festival only accepts student work, and you don’t go to this school? Well, I seem to recall your friend in the biology department serving as an “Executive Producer”…

Local Theater Bumpers
Many local “mom and pop” theaters will often look for amateur work to play before their scheduled films as a bumper. This could be a funny instructional video for the rules of the theater, a sweded version of a popular film, B-roll that relates to the movie you’re about to see or even just a funny short to keep audiences in their seats. (Note: Go for all-ages material.) Here’s the bumper that played in front of every major film at SXSW 2011; it’s a very creative short and definitely an awesome calling card that got seen nightly by some big players in the entertainment industry.

The 48 Hour Film Project
Doing the 48 Hour Film Project (48HFP) is some of the most fun I’ve ever had making movies. Here’s how it works: You’re given a genre, a character, an item and a line of dialogue to incorporate into a four-to-seven-minute-long film. Then, you and your team have exactly 48 hours to write, produce, edit and turn your film in! Teams can consist of anything from hundreds of moviemakers to, in my case, two or three friends with a camera.

The submission fee, while a little steep (about $100), is well worth it, because 48HFP is guaranteed to screen all films completed on time at least twice in a local theater. You can invite friends and family to the screening, and if you’re lucky you might win an award and get to screen with other award-winning shorts! The winning short in each city usually goes on to compete with other winning shorts from around the world, and some have even gone on to screen at festivals like Sundance and Cannes! How’s that for getting your money’s worth?

My sketch comedy troupe participated in the Austin 48 Hour Film Project last year. We were given:
Genre: Detective/Cop Drama
Character: Kevin or Katie Withers, the soccer coach
Item: A purse
Line: “Don’t tell me what to do!”

Our short, Tony Seven, was picked as one of the top 10 entries and was screened with the other winners at the Alamo Drafthouse Ritz (over 200 seats, sold out!). We won “Best Use Of A Line of Dialogue” and got to rub elbows with all the other moviemakers and festival staff. Later, the short also got some play on a local TV station, but that’s an article for another day.

You can see Tony Seven here. (Fun fact: Not only did I direct/produce/edit/run sound/operate the camera, but I also played Kevin and Katie Withers.)

Have any other suggestions, or personal experience, about ways to get your short film on the big screen? Use the comment section below!

Andy Young is a director, editor, writer and composer who lives in Austin, Texas and studies in the University of Texas at Austin’s Radio Television Film program. At the age of twenty, he has produced over 150 short films and one feature, The Legend of Action Man, which he shot on a budget of only $200. Andy is currently a director and staff writer on the Texas Student Television show ”Shenanigans” and continues to make low-budget shorts with his sketch comedy group Dingoman Productions.

Source: http://www.moviemaker.com/blog/item/directing_on_a_dime_how_to_get_your_short_film_on_the_big_screen_20120116/

Friday, January 20, 2012

Film School Online | "Who's Directing the 'Fantastic Four' Reboot?"

By: William Bibbiani
Source: http://www.craveonline.com
Category: Film School Online


We all knew this was coming. The Fantastic Four is just way too big, way to important, way too appealing a comic book franchise to let the Tim Story movies sink them in Hollywood. Some argue that they both sucked, we personally argue that the second one sucked slightly less, but neither were the film we all knew Fantastic Four could be. Now 20th Century Fox is apparently at it again. And who have they got in mind to bring the world's biggest science-fiction superhero story to the screen? Would you believe... the guy whose first film looks like it cost almost nothing to make?

Variety reports that 20th Century Fox is interesting in handing Chronicle director Josh Trank the keys to the Fantasti-Car. His debut feature, a found footage film about teenagers with super powers, opens February 3rd, so fan reaction is unknown, but obviously they're feeling very positive about it. Not positive enough though... Apparently they're waiting to see how Chronicle does on its opening weekend - opposite the Super Bowl, incidentally - before officially making an offer. Wow, that sucks.

No really, that sucks. In addition to competing with one of the most watched broadcasts all year - meaning a large portion of the "guy movie" demographic will be busy for at least a quarter of the weekend - they're judging how audiences like his film based on opening weekend ticket sales, which have f*ck all to do with the quality of an original intellectual property and more to do with a strong cast, a neat-o concept and, most importantly, a bravura marketing campaign. If word of mouth has any effect on opening weekend, it kicks in by Sunday, when everyone will be home watching the Super Bowl.

Keep your fingers crossed for Josh Trank, here, assuming at least that he's the right man for the job. Maybe they'll grade him on a curve. If he gets the gig, it looks like he'll be working from a script by Michael Green, who co-wrote Green Lantern (yikes) and was recently name-dropped in association with the floundering Akira remake. No word on any other talent involved. Are we the only ones who hope that Benedict Cumberbatch lands the part of Victor Von Doom? It sure would be nice to get an actor with real gravitas this time, that's for sure.

CraveOnline will be back with more Fantastic Four reboot news as soon as we figure out how to flame off.


Source: http://www.craveonline.com/film/articles/181467-whos-directing-the-fantastic-four-reboot

Film School Online | "Editing Guild Announces Nominees For EDDIE Awards"

By: Kristy Puchko
Source: http://www.cinemablend.com
Category: Film School Online


While publicly directors garner the most attention when it comes to a film's award season successes, insiders know that it is often a less lauded crewmember that deserves a substantial amount of this praise. This individual is the film's editor, a position in the industry that is woefully mysterious to and unsung by the wider world. Still, directors know the deal.

Many of the most esteemed contemporary American auteurs have recognized their editors as key collaborators in their filmmaking process. Since his directorial debut with 1967's Who's That Knocking On My Door, Martin Scorsese has been working exclusively with editor Thelma Schoonmaker, a partnership that has earned both Oscar accolades. Before the death of his long-time editor Sally Menke in 2010, Quentin Tarantino admitted that she was practically a screenwriter on each of his films as he views the editing process as the final stages of shaping his script. And the iconic Steven Spielberg has openly credited Jaws editor Verna Fields as saving the troubled production and faulty movie monster from being a laughingstock with her keen eye and restrained reveals of the slow-moving shark. Still, editors on the whole are largely unrecognized for their accomplishments and cutting savvy that molds not only the movies, but also the way modern movie audiences retain visual information.

This is why the ACE Eddie Awards are so important. Beyond being a telling indicators of Oscar's Best Feature picks, the ACE Eddies pay tribute to these often unapplauded artists who shape the face of modern cinema, giving them the acclaim they so rightly deserve. Presented by the American Cinema Editors, the 62nd Annual ACE Eddie Awards will honor the very best in film and television editing on February 18, 2012 in a ceremony hosted by quirky comedian Patton Oswalt.
It's sure to be a tight race that will likely lead to an even fiercer Oscar competition. Four-time ACE Eddie winner Themla Schoonmaker, who has earned her seventh nomination for her work on Scorsese's Golden Globe-winning 3D spectacle Hugo, faces off against Kevin Tent, who has landed his fourth nod for collaborating with writer-director Alexander Payne. Spielberg's long-time cutting collaborator Michael Kahn has garnered his ninth and tenth ACE Eddie nominations for War Horse and The Adventures of Tintin, one year after having won the ACE's Career Achievement Award. And comedy cutters William Kerr & Michael L. Sale, who have scored their first nod for Bridesmaids, are squaring off against returning ACE Eddie noms like Dana E. Glauberman (Up In The Air, Juno, Thank You For Smoking) and Alisa Lepselter (Vicky Cristina Barcelona, Sweet and Lowdown).

Source: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Editing-Guild-Announces-Nominees-EDDIE-Awards-28872.html

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Film School Online | "The Los Angeles Film School Honors Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Donates to the International House of Blues Foundation"

By: Cara Loebs
Source: http://www.marketwatch.com
Category: Film School Online


HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Jan 16, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- The Los Angeles Film School is honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day by donating through the efforts of Facebook. Before midnight tonight, for every new "like" The Los Angeles Film School receives, the school will donate one dollar to the International House of Blues Foundation.

http://www.facebook.com/losangelesfilmschool

The International House of Blues Foundation(R) (IHOBF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that provides arts and cultural programs to schools and communities. IHOBF was created in 1993 to support cultural diversity and creative expression through music and art. Every year, the foundation celebrates the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. through competitions, projects and performances that focus on his commitment to social justice and equality for all people.

About The Los Angeles Film School

The Los Angeles Film School, located in the heart of Hollywood, has been serving the community and its students since 1999. This accredited, VA-approved institution offers degrees in Computer Animation, Game Production, Recording Arts and Film. Its facilities include the historic RCA Building at 6363 Sunset Boulevard, and offers access to exceptional industry-standard equipment to its students.

Their faculty of industry professionals has earned credits on a number of major motion pictures, video games and albums. Numerous graduates have received awards at Independent Film Festivals worldwide, engineered multi-platinum albums, and some credits include GRAMMY awards and nominations. "We exude nothing but pride when speaking of our graduates. Their many awards and accomplishments are the result of our students' hard work and dedication," states Diana Derycz-Kessler, President and CEO of The Los Angeles Film School.

For more information about The Los Angeles Film School, please visit: www.lafilm.edu or call 323-860-0789.
 
Source: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-los-angeles-film-school-honors-dr-martin-luther-king-jr-day-donates-to-the-international-house-of-blues-foundation-2012-01-16

Film School Online | "Louis Vuitton Presents Rome Film Project"

By: Sofia Celeste
Source: http://www.wwd.com
Category: Film School Online

ROME — Louis Vuitton aims to perpetuate handcrafted artistry with its latest film project.

The French maison outlined the details of a three-year partnership with Italy’s oldest film school, Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia (Italian National film school) — an endeavor that will fuse Louis Vuitton’s savoir faire with the Italian cinematographers, set designers and costumers of tomorrow.

Louis Vuitton’s support will assist in the formation of an honors committee composed of key figures in cinema; the tutoring of young talents enrolled at the National School of Cinema; the establishment of a scholarship for students with limited means; and the creation of workshops to complement the school’s current curriculum.

In its first year, the partnership will involve a costume workshop focusing on the design of the late 17th century, a project that will involve the participation of famed Italian costume designer Piero Tosi.

“Cinema has taken a lot from the fashion world,” said Marcello Foti, Centro Sperimentale’s general director. “But fashion has taken a lot from cinema,” Foti added.

Highlighting the project’s inspiration and ambitions, Louis Vuitton presented a 50-minute documentary made by Italian journalist Laura Delli Colli and director Guido Torlonia, narrated by Chiara Mastroianni and produced by Luchino Visconti di Modrone.

The film pays homage to the exquisite tradition of Italian cinema artisans and costume designers, and includes clips from epic films like “Ben-Hur” and “Kundun,” whose columns and temples were constructed by Italian artisans.

“I never felt like an artist — an artisan, yes,” said sculptor Gianni Gianese, who worked on historic Italian films like Federico Fellini’s “And the Ship Sails On” and “City of Women.”

“We share a lot of values in common: transmission of heritage, savoir faire, passion for creation and support of talent. We share that this is the oldest school, and we are a very old brand. It was very easy from the first discussion to understand how this partnership would live,” said Geoffroy van Raemdonck, South Europe president of Louis Vuitton.

Louis Vuitton will open a new Rome boutique, the Etoile Maison, at the end of this month, in a historic venue that has been dedicated to a cinema for almost a century.

The Rome Maison is one of 14 Louis Vuitton Maisons in the world. The sprawling boutique will come complete with a screening room.

Despite Italy’s lagging economy, Louis Vuitton hasn’t abandoned plans to invest further in Italy, and will open another Maison in Venice later this year, van Raemdonck explained.

“Italians are a key consumer for us. We need to look at the future. Italy will get out of this crisis,” van Raemdonck said.
 
Source: http://www.wwd.com/eye/fashion/louis-vuitton-presents-rome-film-project-5521060

Film School Online | "Vancouver Film School’s Game Design Expo mixes it up"

By: Blaine Kyllo
Source: http://www.straight.com
Category: Film School Online


In its sixth year, the Vancouver Film School’s Game Design Expo has changed to reflect the shifts in the video-game industry. Dave Warfield, who heads the game-design program at the school, told the Straight this year’s event will feature a mix of games, from big-budget console titles to those produced by smaller, independent studios.

In a phone interview, Warfield explained that in addition to the keynote from Bethesda Game Studios’ Bruce Nesmith about The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, another significant recent release on the agenda is the massively multiplayer Star Wars: The Old Republic. A panel looking at independent game development closes the expo’s industry-speaker day on Saturday (January 21).

Making sure the local community is represented is another priority. “We’re always trying to have that mix of exposure so people that are attending can see not only what’s going on around North America,” Warfield said, “but right here in Vancouver.”

Ian Christy of Slant Six Games will be on hand to talk about Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City, developed for Capcom and slated for release in March. Alumnus Bruce Kelly, meanwhile, returns to VFS to discuss Deus Ex: Human Revolution. The 2006 graduate was the narrative game designer on the game, developed at Eidos Montreal.

Source: http://www.straight.com/article-585681/vancouver/game-design-expo-mixes-it

Film School Online | "Jewish film school with soul"

By: RACHEL MARDER/JOINTMEDIA NEWS SERVICE
Source: http://www.jpost.com
Category: Film School Online


Students of Ma’aleh delve into provocative topics including rape and homosexuality in yeshiva. The Ma’aleh School of Television, Film and the Arts is not a wealthy institution. Its grayish brown edifice easily blends into the buildings that surround it, maintaining an unassuming presence in a quiet ultra-Orthodox neighborhood outside Jerusalem’s Old City. It offers little hint of the enormous creativity and talent that lie between its walls.


Films that emerge from this place are anything but somber. Provocative, jolting and honest to the core, Ma’aleh students delve into taboo topics that would shock its unknowing neighbors: rape, homosexuality in the yeshiva, and divorce between an Orthodox couple, to name a few.

Ma’aleh started out in the Israeli film industry 22 years ago with the intention of giving voice to filmmakers with traditionally held Jewish views. Today, 60-70 percent of Ma’aleh’s student body is religious, and the faculty is a secular to religious mix of experts in their field.

For this school, the issues are what it’s all about. Ma’aleh has been at the forefront of tackling Israeli society’s perceptions of the Orthodox, difficult political and religious issues in Israeli society and the ways Israeli Jews confront real, personal challenges in their lives. Before Ma’aleh came along, portrayals of religious Jews on Israeli TV and in films was always the same, says Einat Kapach, the school’s director of international relations and special projects: rabbis with black beards dealing with halahic issues, quoting verses and talking down to people, and never dealing with “normal life.”

“Religious people were presented as people who had problems with halaha,” Kapach says. And to solve the problems, the character generally needed to give up trying to make religion work and become secular. This one-dimensional stereotype gave little space to religious Jews eager to confront their challenging beliefs without rejecting the whole system, let alone space for normalizing religious Jews by showing them looking for love, serving in the army and fighting with their parents.

“I believe Ma’aleh broke this gap,” Kapach says. “We really feel we were unique and doing something that’s unusual… We were doing something that has changed the Israeli culture.”

School rules prohibit students from showing nudity, hard-core violence or vulgarity. However, no graduates I spoke with complained about these restrictions.Graduate Eliran Malka, 31, a secular Jew who lives in Jerusalem with his wife and four children, says of the regulations that “I didn’t feel it for a second while at Ma’aleh. I just felt as if I was in a good place, a very secure place.” In any film school, there would be controls on a film’s content, Malka says, such as many times a political film has to come from a left-wing perspective.

“I don’t think if you’re secular you’re free and you can do whatever you want in film school,” he says.

Harold Berman, Ma’aleh’s development director, says these stipulations make it so anyone can watch the films, as well as push the filmmaker in his/her creativity in hinting at disturbing events. When you take away images and words designed for shock value, Berman notes that the films really become about the issues themselves.

Co-creator and director of the popular Israeli TV show Srugim,Eliezer “Laizy” Shapira, and many of its writers and production staff are Ma’aleh graduates. The drama follows the lives of five religious Jews in Jerusalem as they date, build their careers and struggle in their marriages, all without crude language or showing sexual relations. On Srugim “someone with a kippah wants to find love,” Kapach says. Simple as that, and yet fairly revolutionary for Israeli television. “Religion does not have to play a role in the film.”

Authenticity in such films as And Thou Shalt Love, the story of a young man in yeshiva who is in love with his study partner, comes from the fact that the director, Ma’aleh graduate ChaimElbaum, underwent a similar experience, having realized he was gay and feeling unsure of his place in the religious world. Elbaum won first prize in the drama competition at Jerusalem’s 2008 Jewish Film Festival.

“The students are not afraid to talk about themselves,” Kapach says. “[They] raise up questions that 10 to 15 years ago people in Israeli TV and film didn’t dare to speak about.”

I recently had the opportunity to spend an afternoon in the school’s SallahShabati auditorium watching a handful of the roughly 150 documentary, experimental and fictional films to emerge from Ma’aleh, of which many have received both top prizes in Israel as well as international recognition at such festivals as the Tribeca Film Festival, the Short Film Festival in Hamburg, Germany, and the Jewish Film Festival in Hong Kong.

Kapach likened my afternoon of film watching to enjoying a “jar of candies.” While I agreed wholeheartedly with this comparison, certain candies left a lump in my throat that has yet to leave. One such film was Barriers by Golan Rise, this year’s first-prize winner for the best short film at Jerusalem’s Film Festival.

The film is centered around a checkpoint station between the West Bank and Israel proper. Uri, the young officer in charge, is faced with a series of ethical questions. A Palestinian mother and her young daughter with Diabetes approach the checkpoint in a bare ambulance, begging Uri to let them through to an Israeli hospital. The other soldiers on duty are skeptical of the story, and Uri is unsure, as he has received a warning that a suicide bomber is intending to enter Jerusalem that day.

Meanwhile, Uri’s mother, a human rights activist, shows up to film the Palestinians being demeaned waiting in line to cross, and is shocked to find her son in charge. After much tense screaming and anxiety-filled moments, Uri lets the ambulance pass, which provides the distraction for a man with a bomb to blow himself up, killing the Russian soldier on duty. I felt reduced to a puddle on the floor, unsure where to turn for answers or judgments on right and wrong. The film is captivating and extremely challenging.

“I tried to create the complicated reality,” Rise says. “I think all the political movies that were in the past, they show one way to look, one point of view, and I tried to make a complicated point of view.”

Rise himself identifies with the choices Uri has to make, as he served as a commander in the West Bank, and continues to serve in a reserve unit. “When I found myself as a commander in the West Bank, I saw a complicated situation,” he says. He describes one experience of getting a call at 6 a.m. that a suicide bomber planned to approach the barrier. “I remember that I saw a father and a son… standing in the barrier,” he says.

The two stood there for two to three hours, clutching a small bag of hummus and pita. “I looked into the eyes of this father and I thought about my father,” Rise recalls. In that moment he started to cry, so overwhelmed was he by the sadness of the situation, and at the same time feeling the need to be aware of the danger alert. “I found myself in a very complicated situation. You must choose all the time what is your way.”

This generation of young Israelis is different in this way from previous generations. While his parents are sure of right and wrong and have clear political opinions, he says his peers struggle more with the gray areas. While at Ma’aleh, Rise says he was religious, but then fell away from it, and has now returned to it. Still, he says his approach to Judaism is not so clear to him. “The movie is very similar to this point. My parents have a very sharp way [regarding politics and religion]. My generation does not. We are not like our parents.”

Rise, 33, lives on Kibbutz EinTzurim with his wife and three children. He says Barriers has opened a lot doors for him in the Israeli film industry, and he hopes all over the world. “People from the industry call and say good things about me,” he says. “But I need to be cool, not to think that now I’m the best director in Israel,” he says, chuckling. He is currently writing a feature-length film called The Parliament.

Rise says he chose to study at Ma’aleh because its teachers gave him a “unique” space that embraces complexity. He describes the school’s approach: “We give you the tools, the space, the teachers. Just do what’s in your heart.”

Like any good filmmaker, the students at Ma’aleh bare their souls and offer universal truths that any viewer can relate to. They explore and criticize, but do not reject their problematic country or religion. Rather, they “ask questions, and at the end of the day go back home,” says Kapach.

Ma’aleh films are shown at festivals and workshops all over the world and are available to communities for purchase as educational tools. Visitors to Jerusalem are also welcome to stop by to watch a film and meet with the director. Visit maale.co.il for more information and to watch segments of films.
 
Source: http://www.jpost.com/LifeStyle/Article.aspx?id=254141

Film School Online | "Top British film producer slams Oscars as 'baloney'"

By: Herald Sun
Source: http://www.heraldsun.com.au
Category: Film School Online


Tim Bevan, the man who founded the company behind hits such as Atonement, Elizabeth and Four Weddings and a Funeral, said the famous movie awards had been distorted by hype and aggressive campaigns to woo the Academy voters.

The Oscars had become so cynical, Bevan asserted, that their British equivalent, the BAFTAs, were now a better guide to the best films of the year.

"There's so much blah and baloney over there," he said. "BAFTA takes it very seriously. There's not the same level of hype and hoopla and tea parties (to promote the films to voters)."

Bevan's comment came after Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, another film from his Working Title stable, received 11 nominations yesterday for this year's BAFTAS.live performance by Ice T. As far as now, I can’t really lock you down with a date and a venue, but I’ll be up there and there will probably definitely be some performances because people from the film are talking about showing up. So, the good thing about hip hop is that all you need are some beats and a mic, and we’re there.” Although his films have won six Oscars and 26 Baftas, Bevan said he is not expecting Tinker Tailor to figure prominently when the Oscar nominees are announced next Wednesday (Australian time).

The 84th Academy Awards will be held at Hollywood's Kodak Theatre on February 27 (Australian time).
 
Source: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/entertainment/awards-season/top-british-film-producer-slams-oscars-as-baloney/story-fn4sol8z-1226247540998

Film School Online | "Sundance Filmmaker profile: Ice T"

By: david burger
Source: http://www.sltrib.com
Category: Film School Online


Ice T — born Tracy Marrow nearly 53 years ago — has a career arc much like fellow rapper Ice Cube, parlaying name and face recognition into successful careers on screen.

But while Ice Cube has taken the mild-mannered film route, Ice T has played ice-cold-blooded NYPD Detective Odafin Tutuola on NBC’s “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” since 2000, investigating grisly sexual offenses.

Ice T has recorded only one album since 1999 — titled “Gangsta Rap” — a nod to his landmark 1991 album “O.G. Original Gangster.” That was back when he himself was ripped from the headlines with his band Body Count, infamous for the controversial anthem “Cop Killer.”

The not-family-friendly Ice T is making his directorial debut with a documentary about the origins and the continuing importance of hip hop, titled “Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap.” With extraordinary access to top-shelf artists such as Dr. Dre, Eminem and Kanye West, Ice T wants his film to be the definitive account of where rap has been and where it is going.

In an interview, Ice T talked on the life-changing power of rap, why he turned to TV, and what it means for a first-time director to be invited to Sundance:

How rap saved his life • “It gave me a place where I could explain some of the issues I was feeling in life, versus acting [them] out [with] resentment or anger. It also gave me a job and an income versus what I was doing previously in the streets. And then when I finally found out that what I was saying had value, it gave me a new look on life, a new respect for things. I knew I had a chance to be something more.”

Why he believed he could tell the story of rap • “I was one of the early rap pioneers. I knew enough artists out there. I knew the ones that I respected and I felt that somebody had to tell this story. I felt it would be better if somebody from hip hop, a real rapper, to do it, rather than a journalist or outsider coming in, and I knew I could put a fair slant on it. Everybody was very open, easy-going. That’s what makes the movie so real. ... Everyone is in front of the camera, but they’re also talking to one of their friends and one of their peers. So I get interviews that I don’t think anyone else could have got.”

On his focus on TV in past years • “You just take other career paths. After “Seventh Deadly Sin” [his 1999 album], I started to lean toward more acting. [You] put out albums and you think, “I’ve done that, I’ve accomplished that. I’ve climbed that mountain.” Acting was a new challenge to me. To get good, you have to put 100 percent into it, so I’ve just been focusing on acting for the last 12, 15 years.” On the genre of hip hop in 2012 • “It got to be very, very pop for a while — now radio plays it — a certain form of hip hop. And because of the Internet, the underground artists haven’t really been able to, as we say, eat. They don’t have the ability to sell records as much. Record stores are now gone, so it got to be desperate times for the underground. ... Those artists who have profitability have been able to prosper. But, to me, a lot of the content has suffered. There are no artists like Public Enemy. There are no artists like KRS-One. There are no artists like Ice Cube who dealt with issues. So, it’s a different terrain.”

On the challenges of film making • “I think the biggest obstacle is production, and our movie had heavy logistical problems getting these people in front of a camera when everyone is working and they’re all moving targets. It was definitely labor-intensive to be able to get your crew, get myself, and the artist all in the same place at the same time, and then make this cost-effective. We couldn’t travel all the way across the country to shoot each artist. We had to get them together in a certain area to be able to shoot them. It took two years to shoot the film. Fortunately, we had time on our side. We weren’t rushed.”

Sundance • “I’m definitely coming. I’m overwhelmed. This is a great thing to me. For somebody at my stage in my career who’s had a few accolades in his time, this is really exciting for me. A lot of the music [awards shows] that go on [in Los Angeles or New York] — I don’t even go, because I’m not nominated and I’ve been to enough of them. This one, I definitely have to go. This is the biggest thing in my personal film career. Being an actor is one thing but as a director, come on, Sundance, is ... until I go to the Oscars, this is the biggest thing yet.”

The possibility of film-related hip-hop concerts during Sundance • “Right now, we’re looking at it. There will probably be a live performance by Ice T. As far as now, I can’t really lock you down with a date and a venue, but I’ll be up there and there will probably definitely be some performances because people from the film are talking about showing up. So, the good thing about hip hop is that all you need are some beats and a mic, and we’re there.”
 
Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/lifestyle/53273547-80/ice-rap-artists-film.html.csp

Film School Online | "Film-makers engineer new career boost"

By: this is staffordshire
Source: http://www.thisisstaffordshire.co
Category: Film School Online


FILM production firm Humanoid has completed a project for Leek College to raise the profile of engineering as a career.

The Stafford-based company, which also has an office at Media City in Salford, went behind the scenes at a range of employers across the region.

Producers said they hope the finished film will promote the state-of-the-art projects Staffordshire companies are carrying out for international clients.

They visited companies including Goodwin International in Hanley, Unilathe in Smallthorne, Charles Leek & Sons in Leek, Staffordshire Precision Engineering in Newcastle, Grenville Engineering in Tunstall, and Rocester digger giant JCB.

Humanoid managing director Martyn Lomax said: "It's amazing to see the extensive and diverse range of skills demonstrated at locally-based engineering firms.

"The level of opportunity available to young people in this sector is immense.

"I hope our video helps to raise awareness of this exciting industry, and to promote Leek College's excellent facilities and courses."

Sentinel Business reported in August that Humanoid had opened a new office at Media City, Salford, which is home to the BBC and ITV.

You can watch the film at www.humanoidproductions .com

Source: http://www.thisisstaffordshire.co.uk/Film-makers-engineer-new-career-boost/story-14437447-detail/story.html

Film School Online | "Miami International Film Festival lineup boasts mariachis, slackers and zombies"

By: Rene Rodriguez
Source: http://www.miamiherald.com
Category: Film School Online


Mariachis, slackers, canines and zombies are about to invade South Florida, courtesy of the 29th Miami International Film Festival, which runs March 2-11.

A slate of more than 100 films from 35 countries was unveiled Tuesday by Miami Dade College, which produces the venerable event. Along with the usual emphasis on Ibero-American feature films, documentaries and up-and-coming directors, this year’s festival features several new categories, including a spotlight on Quebec cinema, a celebration of American indies, a group of family-oriented pictures and a trio of thrillers in a programming block titled “Mayhem.”

Opening night brings Mariachi Gringo, the story of a Kansas teenager (Shawn Ashmore of X-Men: The Last Stand) who runs away to Mexico to become a mariachi singer. The closing night film will be Argentina’s award-winning Chinese Take-Away ( Un cuento chino), the story of a shopkeeper (the great Ricardo DarĂ­n) whose quiet life is changed after he befriends a Chinese immigrant.

Other festival highlights include:

Juan of the Dead ( Juan de los muertos), a satirical horror-comedy from Cuba about a man who launches a profitable zombie-killing business after the dead start rising from the grave.

Darling Companion, director Lawrence ( The Big Chill) Kasdan’s first film since the 2003 Stephen King adaptation Dreamcatcher, about a woman (Diane Keaton) who loves her dog more than she loves her husband (Kevin Kline).

Jeff Who Lives at Home, the latest comedy from brothers Jay and Mark Duplass ( Cyrus, Baghead, The Puffy Chair), starring Jason Segel as a 30 year-old layabout who still lives at home with his mother (Susan Sarandon) and Ed Helms as his unhappily-married brother.

About Face, the new documentary by Miami’s Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, explores how women deal with aging through interviews with former supermodels (including Christie Brinkley, Christy Turlington and Jerry Hall) who are now between the ages of 50 and 80.

Under African Skies, a portrait of musician Paul Simon as he returns to South Africa to recount the legacy of his album Graceland, from Paradise Lost co-directing Joe Berlinger.

Some Day This Pain Will Be Useful to You, an English-language drama from Italian director Roberto Faenza, based on Peter Cameron’s novel, about a sensitive teenager (Toby Regbo) trying to make sense of the world around him. The supporting cast includes Marcia Gay Harden, Ellen Burstyn, Lucy Liu, Peter Gallagher and Aubrey Plaza.

The Diary of Preston Plummer, the shot-in-Florida drama about a man who falls for a woman with a troubled past, co-starring Robert Loggia, who will receive a career tribute at the festival.

World-class directors returning to the festival with their new films include David Trueba ( Madrid 1987), Santiago Segura (the 3D action-comedy Torrente 4: Lethal Crisis), Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne ( The Kid with a Bike), Jean-Marc Vallée ( Café des Flore) and Terence Davies ( The Deep Blue Sea).

Along with the return of the Ibero-American, short films and documentary competitions, the festival is introducing a new category, the Ibero-American Opera Prima, in which seven first-time filmmakers from Spain, Portugal and Latin America vie for a $5,000 cash prize. In collaboration with the City of Miami Beach and the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau, the college will open a Festival Village space on Lincoln Road, offering free screenings, opportunities to meet visiting filmmakers and a stage for photos.

Last year’s festival drew an estimated 70,000. “It’s exciting to see the festival’s reputation as an influential and unique player among U.S. and international film festivals become stronger and stronger,” said executive director Jaie LaPlante.

“As a whole, the program makes bold statements about the world we live in and challenges audiences to think about our changing world,” said Miami Dade College president Eduardo PadrĂłn.

Tickets for the festival will go on sale in February. A complete schedule of films and events will be posted to www.miamifilmfestival.com

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/01/17/2593802/miami-international-film-festival.html

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Film School Online | "FREE FILM SCHOOL #31: I'd Like to Thank the Academy"

By: Witney Seibold
Source: http://www.craveonline.com
Category: Film School Online


It’s mid-January, which means we’re smack in the middle of Oscar season. For the next few weeks, lasting until the Academy Award ceremony on February 26th, we film nuts will have to choose whether we will be mildly amused, blindingly annoyed, or willing to whimsically play along with the chunky tidal wave of Oscar glut pouring our way like so much fetid spaghetti sauce. It’s not until the ceremony is over, and the shock begins to wear off, that we’ll be able to look at movies clearly again. We’ll be able to take a deep breath, sober up, and judge whether or not the film awarded Best Picture the night before was really worthy of such an honor, or if we’ll have a crippling case of buyer’s remorse (Really? Crash? What were we thinking?). Your eyes will be sore from ogling your favorite actors and actresses in their finest (?) evening ware, and your brain will be sorely echoing with the phrase “I would like to thank the Academy.”

As a kid, I never knew what that last phrase meant. For a while, I suspected each actor went to an acting academy of some sort, and their acting school – in showbiz jargon – was always called “the academy.” It wasn’t until I was a teenager who actually bothered to pick up the occasional issue of Variety that I learned about The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, or AMPAS, as it’s commonly referred to in print.

Welcome, my dear students, to the latest installment of CraveOnline’s Free Film School, taught by me, your film-saturated professor, Witney Seibold. This week, in conjunction with all the Oscar hubbub, I have decided to give you and important history lesson, this time on the founding and the function of The Academy.

Source: http://www.craveonline.com/film/articles/181365-free-film-school-31-id-like-to-thank-the-academy

Monday, January 16, 2012

Film School Online | "Jeff Probst directing feature film"

By: CNN Entertainment Senior Producer Matt Carey
Source: http://marquee.blogs.cnn.com
Category: Film School Onli
ne

Jeff Probst is looking for a few good men and women - not to compete on “Survivor," but to star in a film he’s directing.

The reality TV show host is currently casting for a movie called "Kiss Me," a feature film he plans to begin shooting in Los Angeles next month. He’s already lined up John Corbett (“Sex and the City”, “My Big Fat Greek Wedding”) to play one role, and 20-year-old Irish actress Sarah Bolger (“In America”) to play the lead.

The film is described as a coming of age story that follows a girl “through the physical and emotional growing pains of her teen years.”

A casting notice for the movie adds details on the lead character: “Forced to wear a back brace to cure her scoliosis, Zoe must navigate complicated relationships with her mother Edith, her best friend Shelby and Chance, a married man whose kids she babysits.”

This will be the second directing effort for Probst, a four-time winner of the outstanding reality host Emmy. In 2002, he wrote and directed “Finder’s Fee," a feature film that starred Ryan Reynolds and James Earl Jones.

Apart from the directing project and his work on “Survivor,” Probst is slated to host a syndicated daytime talk show that will debut in the fall.
 
Source: http://marquee.blogs.cnn.com/2012/01/11/jeff-probst-directing-feature-film/

Film School Online | "Angelina Jolie on directing: I had a complete emotional breakdown"

By: Olivia Allin
Source: www.ontheredcarpet.com
Category: Film School Online


Angelina Jolie made her feature film directing debut with "In The Land of Blood and Honey," but the actress admitted that she wasn't always sure of herself and had a "complete breakdown." "I had a complete emotional breakdown in the shower and Brad found me crying," Jolie said. "I didn't plan to become a director, and I still have trouble saying I'm a director. I just wanted to tell this story and I ended up by default being the director."

"I felt this huge responsibility and I felt very small," she continued. "I thought, 'Who am I to take this on?' ...I had a complete meltdown."

The experience was, of course, not all bad though as "In The Land of Blood and Honey" was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film ( See a complete list of Golden Globe nominations). And Jolie credits her actors for making her job easier.

"If I didn't have such great actors, I think I would have been frustrated but it was just so easy. It was lovely!" Jolie said, adding that she used her own experience as an actress as well. "I tried to be the best of what I knew [from experience with directors] and not the worst, so that really helped me."

The film was released in select cities in the United States on December 23 and will be released in several other cities like Dallas, Charlotte, Phoenix and Denver on January 13.

"In The Land of Blood and Honey" depicts a romance between a Bosnian woman and Serbian man during the Bosnia war in the 1990s. It stars actors Zana Marjanovic and Goran Kostic. Jolie does not appear in the film.

The movie is nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film. The 2012 ceremony takes place on January 15.

Jolie, who is known for her global humanitarian efforts as a UN Goodwill Ambassador, also wrote the film's screenplay and says she took on the project because she was personally interested in the subject matter.

When asked if she planned on directing more projects, the actress told OnTheRedCarpet.com host Chris Balish and other reporters at the 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival on January 7 that she is open to the idea.

"I'm still so shy to even consider myself a writer-director," Jolie said. "But I think I'm so driven by something I care about it. So it'd have to be that - if something comes my way and I'd just feel so compelled to tell it, then I think I just might jump in, but I'm still shy."

The actress, who won an Oscar for her role as a mental patient in the 1999 movie "Girl, Interrupted," served as the film's director and will take questions from fans during the interactive session.

Source: http://www.ontheredcarpet.com/Angelina-Jolie-on-directing:-I-had-a-complete-emotional-breakdown/8504301

Film School Online | "Lord Smith proposes British Film Week"

By: BBC NEWS
Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk
Category: Film School Online


Concluding his review of the industry, he said British films had been "taking audiences around the world by storm" but that "we cannot be complacent".

A new anti-piracy law and film education in schools are also proposed.

Last week, PM David Cameron said the film industry should support "commercially successful pictures".

Moving to allay fears this could be at the expense of cinematic diversity in the UK, review chairman Lord Smith told journalists the panel was "not trying to dictate an artistic vision".

"We advocate support for the widest possible range of films from the overtly commercial to the overtly arty and much in between," he said.
'Prime position'

The government-commissioned review contains 56 recommendations for ministers, the British Film Institute (BFI) and the industry to give greater support to UK film-makers.

"British film is in prime position to make a major contribution to the growth of the UK's economy, to the development of attractive and fulfilling careers for young people and to the creation of job opportunities across the country," Lord Smith said. The report said an annual British Film Week could "re-establish the brand of the British film".

It could "provide audiences across the UK with access to the full spectrum of British film, giving them a greater insight into its breadth, depth and originality".

It also called for "film clubs, festivals, pop-ups, rural community venues or digitally equipped modern cinemas" to give more opportunities to see movies, especially outside of London.

And it urged the government to make it a criminal offence to record films shown in cinemas.

It notes that "90% of unlawful copies of films" made available before official DVD releases "originate from illicit recordings made in cinemas".

People who make recordings in cinemas can currently be prosecuted under the 2006 Fraud Act but the film industry believes the legislation is too complex - a conviction requires proof that the person intends to distribute their recording for profit.

The report also recommends a programme to "bring film education into every school", investment in digital technology to make films more widely available and improved broadband speeds to boost the legal market for online films in the UK.
Family films

It says that, on traditionally quiet times at cinemas, a wider range of British and independent films should be shown.

Other recommendations include:

    More family films (the report says they account for 14% of Hollywood movies compared with 2% of British productions)
    More investment in films from TV broadcasters
    That a proportion of funding for lottery-backed films should be used to invest in "new and diverse talent" (the report says "only 12% of writers and 13% of directors of British films are female, and in London only 7% of the workforce is of ethnic origin")
    A share of the profit for writers, directors and producers if their film becomes a hit

The report follows last year's abolition of the UK Film Council with funding responsibilities passed over to the BFI.

In a statement, the BFI welcomed the report "against the backdrop of a record year for British film and film talent" saying it "rightly places audiences at the heart of future UK film policy".

"We share the exciting ambition to drive a vibrant and prosperous future for British film and offer audiences excellence and choice," it added. It said the BFI had "enjoyed a fruitful dialogue with Chris Smith" and that the recommendations would "help inform and define the BFI's forward plan in support of the whole film sector".

The government and the BFI have two months in which to make formal responses to the review.

The British Film Commission, which encourages the production of international films in Britain, said the report confirmed that "the UK's highly-skilled, film-making talent represent some of the best in the business".

Last week, Mr Cameron said the British film industry "should aim even higher, building on the incredible success of recent years".

Reacting to the prime minister's assertion that the industry should support "commercially successful pictures", Ken Loach said: "If everyone knew what would be successful before it was made, there would be no problem.

"What you need to do is fund a lot of different, varied projects and then you'll get a really vibrant industry."

British-made box office successes include The Inbetweeners movie which earned more than £45m last year.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-16575204

Film School Online | "Sleeping Bear Films eyes screen success at Sundance Film Festival"

By: Joe Szczesny of Journal Register News Service
Source: http://www.heritage.com
Category: Film School Online


The Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah is an American institution that each winter draws filmmakers and movie fans from all over the world and this year a local firm has earned the chance to show a short film it produced.

Sleeping Bear Films of Bloomfield Hills will show the film “Henley,” which was one of 32 American-made short features selected to appear at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

Nancy Johnston, one of Sleeping Bear’s principals, said during a recent interview it was quite an honor for Sleeping Bear to have “Henley” selected to appear at Sundance. Overall, The Sundance Festival organizers received 7,675 short films from around the world and fewer than 2 percent will make it on the screens in Park City.

“It’s very exclusive list. This is very exciting,” she said, adding she plans to attend the festival, which opens this week, with friends and family.

Moreover, the 11½ film has already won the top award in its category at Clint Eastwood’s Carmel Film Festival last fall.

Phil Foster, Sleeping Bear’s co-founder and co-executive producer with Johnston of “Henley,” said he first started fooling around with the idea of producing independent films nearly 10 years ago. Finally, he decided if he was actually going to produce he needed his own company, said Foster, who also is a creative director at the Campbell Ewald advertising agency in Warren.

“I’ve been pursuing film since 2004 as a side business. We realized at some point in 2009 we need to figure out how to make a business out of it,” Foster said. At this point, he had reached out to Johnston, whom he had known since his school days at Bishop Gallagher High School in Harper Woods.

Johnston also had worked at Campbell Ewald and had spent a decade in England where she worked in film before moving back to the Detroit area with her family. “I knew I wanted Nancy involved,” Foster said.

After organizing Sleeping Bear, Johnston and Foster said one of the first things they did was begin looking for a project for their new firm. One of the people they reached out to was Craig Macneill, a New York filmmaker who was also embarking on a project that would eventually Henley.

“I first met Craig many years ago when I lived in New York and I’m a huge admirer of his work, so having the chance to get involved with him on this was a great opportunity,” Foster said.

Source: http://www.heritage.com/articles/2012/01/16/life/doc4f141c59848ef408839280.txtb

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Film School Online | "Film Producer: ‘Everybody should see it’"

By:  Johnny Firecloud
Source: http://www.craveonline.com
Category: Film School Online


Slipknot singer Corey Taylor and drummer Shawn "Clown" Crahan have launched a film production company called Living Breathing Films.

The duo recently told Rolling Stone of their plans to unveil the company at the Sundance Film Festival between January 19 - 29, and had the goal of producing films that were similar to the band's overall aesthetic.

Crahan said: Our movies are going to be psychological. They're going to affect you. When The Exorcist came out people got up and left after 15 minutes and that turns us on. If I haven't got someone to leave in five minutes for at least one of my films then I'm not doing my job."

Taylor, meanwhile, discussed his collaborative aspirations behind the camera, mentioning that he'd be thrilled to work with Rob Zombie: "Obviously I'd love to do something with Rob [Zombie]. I think that'd be sick for the three of us, being from such a musical background, to put something together that's just fucking crazy and awesome to watch, but at the same time is a little disturbing."

It may not all be Gacy and Manson, murder and mayhem, however. Crahan revealed his softer appreciation for film as well: "I just watched Good Will Hunting a week ago and I actually cried three times in the movie. That's what Robin Williams can do to me – he can make me laugh as a comedian, but as an actor I completely believe him."

Taylor also recently revealed that Slipknot's next studio album would be inspired by their former bassist Paul Gray. The frontman said that Gray's death of a suspected overdose in June 2010 would make for a "very melancholy" fifth LP. 

Source: http://www.craveonline.com/music/articles/181249-slipknot-members-start-film-production-company

Film School Online | "Film Producer: ‘Everybody should see it’"

By:  Epoch Times Staff
Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com
Category: Film School Online


LOS ANGELES—Shen Yun inspired and educated another sold-out house at Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on its opening night on Friday in downtown Los Angeles.

Isaiah Francis, a screenwriter and film producer who has worked with Hollywood titans such as Clint Eastwood, Martin Scorcese, and Leonardo DiCaprio, described the performance as “brilliant.”

“I’ve seen a lot of plays. [Shen Yun is] very systematic, organized. It was an experience. Very beautiful,” he said.

“The male dancers, their choreography, very beautiful. The women, very elegant.”

Shen Yun uses classical Chinese dance to bring the audience through China’s 5,000 years of history, from ancient times up to today.

“World class, that’s all I can say, world class. I think everybody should see it—Asian, white, black. It’s something that stands out on its own,” Mr. Francis said.


In addition to the talent and production elements, Mr. Francis was particularly appreciative of the themes of freedom, drawing awareness to the harsh persecution in China today of Falun Dafa, a spiritual practice rooted in Chinese culture that has been outlawed by the communist regime.

“The piece where the kids were beat up for practicing what they believe in just stood out,” he said, referring to a piece that depicts the persecution of Falun Dafa launched in China in 1999.

“I’m very much a free spirit. I stand for freedom, free speech.”

He praised the “flawless” performance of Shen Yun’s “world class” dancers.

“I’ve never seen anything like this … where everybody was on beat. No one messed up.”

The ancient art form of classical Chinese dance includes combinations of leaps, spins, tumbles, flips, and turns that are mastered by the performers through rigorous training.

“The flips were—my god, if I tried to do one of those I’d probably have a heart attack, break legs, I don’t know,” he joked.

“It was amazing on all levels!”

Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/shen-yun-on-tour/film-producer-everybody-should-see-it-175657.html

Film School Online | "Kelsey Grammer wins drama acting award, 3 movie stars win for TV work"

By: Associated Press
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com
Category: Film School Online


BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The names were familiar: Kelsey Grammer, Matt LeBlanc, Claire Danes, Laura Dern and Jessica Lange. The television work for which they were honored by the Golden Globes Sunday night wasn’t.

They are actors largely known for their work in film or in shows on commercial broadcast networks. Each took Golden Globe trophies for roles on new cable television series that won critical acclaim and commercial success in the past year, sometimes both.
Danes won her third Globe for portraying CIA agent Carrie Mathison on Showtime’s new “Homeland.” The series that explored terrorism and an Iraq war veteran also won a Golden Globe for best television drama.

Danes, who won her first Globe at age 15 for “My So-Called Life,” remembered being so flustered then that she forgot to thank her parents.

“I am so lucky to have another opportunity to let them know how lucky I am to have their love and encouragement,” she said.

Grammer’s signature television role was the pompous psychiatrist Frasier Crane for many years on “Cheers” and “Frasier,” but he won for best actor in a TV drama Sunday for playing a powerful Chicago mayor on Starz’s “Boss.”

LeBlanc, one of NBC’s famed “Friends,” didn’t need to stretch too far in his new role. He played Matt LeBlanc in the Showtime series “Episodes,” winning him honors for acting in a comedy. He thanked the show’s writers.

“They wrote a Matt LeBlanc who, let’s be honest, was a lot more interesting and fun than the real thing,” he said. “I wish I was him.”

Lange, after receiving four Golden Globes for movies that included “A Streetcar Named Desire,” won best supporting actress in a TV series for her role in FX’s new “American Horror Story.”

“I find it ... rarer ever year to find a piece of work that is beautifully written and gives you something to do,” she said. “It certainly was this.”

Dern was named best actress in a TV comedy for her role in HBO’s “Enlightened,” playing environmental activist Amy Jellicoe. Dern’s mother, actress Diane Ladd who plays her mother in the series, looked on proudly from the audience.

ABC’s “Modern Family” carried the flag for commercial broadcast networks, following up its Emmy for best television comedy by winning the Golden Globe. Creator Steve Levitan and actress Sofia Vergara accepted the award with a comic riff in which she spoke in Spanish and Levitan “translated.”

“Mildred Pierce” didn’t win best TV miniseries or movie, but Winslet won for her acting. She played a strong-willed divorcee in Depression-era California in this remake of the Joan Crawford classic.

“I want to thank HBO for being absent when we needed it to be absent and being present when we needed a little more shooting time,” Winslet.

PBS’ ”Downton Abbey” won best for best TV miniseries or movie, beating out three nominees from HBO.

“How fabulous this is,” said producer Julian Fellowes. “The whole ‘Downton Abbey’ adventure has been an extraordinary one, like spotting a promising child and waking up to find they won the Olympics.”

Idris Elba, who plays the detective John Luther in BBC America’s “Luther,” won the Globe for best actor in a TV movie or miniseries. He looked at the camera and saluted his daughter, who he said was hosting a Golden Globe party.

Peter Dinklage, one of the few American actors in the mostly British “Game of Thrones” on HBO, won the award for best TV supporting actor. In his speech, he admitted to being “a little nervous” because he and his wife hired a baby sitter for the first time for their daughter.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/tv/grammer-wins-globe-for-boss-3-movie-stars-take-tv-jobs/2012/01/15/gIQAB3hz1P_story.html

Film School Online | "Parker Palm Springs' trendy film festival after-party makes every guest a star"

By: Alison Elsner
Source: http://www.mydesert.com
Category: Film School Online


The Palm Springs International Film Festival gala was grand, but the after-party was nothing to sneeze at.

In fact, some of the town's most savvy partiers considered it to be the hot ticket of the festival.

Rankings aside, the Parker Palm Springs was clearly the place to be following the 23rd annual awards gala.

Several hundred guests who had a coveted after-gala ticket were ushered into a chic outdoor lounge with trendy seating and a full bar.

Actor Ed Lauter and his wife, Mia, were there surrounded by admirers and regaling guests with stories of how they fell for each other at Musso and Frank's in Hollywood.

Gala chairman Jim Houston and festival chairman Harold Matzner were busy shaking hands and receiving congratulations for the best awards gala ever.

Nearby was the Cartier lounge, where power couples present included Congresswoman Mary Bono Mack and husband Connie Mack visiting with Patti and Jack Grundhofer, Lori and Aubrey Serfling, Mary Roche and son Scott Taschner, Arthur and Patty Newman and Lee and Marie Weigel.

Bono Mack noted: “Everyone looks amazing. Sonny would be very proud.”

Parker general manager Brandon McCurley and festival director Darryl MacDonald chatted enthusiastically with Olivia Wilde, David Baron and Joyce Ohmura.

Vanguard Award winner Charlize Theron, actress Shailene Woodley and actor Patton Oswald were also spotted groovin' in the lounge, as were Bill and Suzanne Houck.

Elizabeth Matzner and Emily Dindial were seen on the dance floor with Jessica Chastain, Octavia Spencer and Jonah Hill.

Gloria and Ann Greer were there, as were actors Judy Greer and Melissa McCarthy along with Marie Pinazzotto and Carol Ammon.

The main indoor foyer featured a towering display of petit-fours, tarts and mini-gateaux, all surrounding tall glass columns filled with fluffy strawberry cream.
 
Source: http://www.mydesert.com/article/20120115/LIFESTYLES09/201150313/Grandest-galas?odyssey=mod|newswell|text|Frontpage|s