Archive for December, 2009

Our 3 Minute Wonder winners announced

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009 posted by Helen Jack

A massive thanks to all of the 4docs filmmakers for uploading their films to the ‘Good to Know’ competition supported by the The Co-operative, and a huge congratulations to our four winners – Ashton John, Andrew Hinton, Ben Jones and Jeremy Riggall.

With over 200 film submissions it was pretty fierce competition and a tough selection process for the judging panel, but we’re all really proud of the final selection and hope you’ll find things you think are good to know.
The films will be screening on Channel 4 as part of the 3 Minute Wonder from January 11th – 14th at 7.55pm. Alternatively, you can see them here - Please and Thanks, Banking on Change , Open Film Cluband Dreams of a Dinner Lady .

Shortlisted Filmmakers for Bridging the Gap

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009 posted by Helen Jack

Emerging from my post-xmas hibernation, I’ve opened my eyes (and my inbox) after a week’s worth of food-gauging, film-consuming and present-handling. Trawling through emails, I searched for golden nuggets of doc news, and alas, amongst the junk, I found you something to chew on.


I’ve talked about Bridging the Gap in previous posts (dig back through if you need updating), and I’m excited to see that they’ve announced their shortlisted filmmakers. This year, Bridging the Gap asked filmmakers to submit a treatment for a short doc around the theme of ‘Surprise’. From 125 submissions, they selected twelve to take part in their 2010 Bridging the Gap Production Scheme, which will help filmmakers develop their ideas through a series of workshops over the next three months, resulting in a pitch in March to have the film commissioned. For those of you based in Glasgow, you should pop along to the public masterclasses at Edinburgh College of Art – the first one is on 22 January at 14:00 and will feature Swiss filmmaker Peter Liechti.

The shortlisted filmmakers are Amy Rose, Edinburgh (Twinset), Benjamin Wigley, Nottingham (PS Your Mystery Sender), Derville Quigley, Belfast (No Toes), Emma Barnie, London (Switched Off) Eric Robinson, Edinburgh (Remembering Yellow), Holly Elson, Stratford (Letter to my Father), Ilinca Calugareanu, Manchester (Rosha-Mura), Jonathan Carr, Glasgow (Get Luder), Michelle Coomber, London (Lost Every Day), Rana Ayoub, Edinburgh (On Off), Sam Firth, Mallaig (Surprise! Your Body is Eating Itself), Tim Travers Hawkins, Canterbury (Surprise AZ). Of these twelve, seven will be commissioned and receive up to £16,000. Lots of luck to all the filmmakers and big well done for getting shortlisted.

Things beginning with D: Doc Heads, D-Word and Doc Marathon – Delightful!

Saturday, December 12th, 2009 posted by Helen Jack

Doc Heads teamLast night saw the fourth (and most successful) Doc Heads night in London, with another strong programme of shorts and a great evening of bar talk – hats off to Prime Focus for shouting a generous tab. The intimate Brick Lane venue results in a pleasant cramming of bodies, letting you meet people with the turn of a head. I discovered the ladies toilet is also a hot spot for meeting new filmmakers (who knew?). Maybe the next Doc Heads will see people pitching ideas over toilet doors and leaving cards in hand towel dispensers.Filmmakers Joshua Neale (middle) and Tom Swindell (r)

The DH team pride themselves on showing quality docs, whether they were made last week or five years ago. This is great for those of us who missed gems like Karaoke Soul (Joshua Neale, 2007) the first time round. Neale’s film stood out last night for both its expressive characters and original style; with tracking shots and a use of music that wouldn’t be out of place in an artfully contsructed feature, Karaoke Soul reminded me of British cinema at its best. The film looks at locals in a Lancashire town who share one pinnyinterest – the escapism once a week of singing karaoke at their local pub. Following a young mother, a visually impared Queen fanatic and a single father who channels remorse through the lyrics of others, Karaoke Soul is a humble portrayal of the healing powers born from expression and creativity. It’s down to personal taste, I know, but I’m a sucker for films that show a darker, more cynical underbelly through a lens that’s beautiful but not beautified. Other films in the programme were Pinny Grylls’s lovely Peter and Ben (2008), Eva Weber’s Steel Homes (2008) and Tom Swindell’s Felix’s Machines (2009) – an inspired choice.

On to festivals…

This week, one of the most important festivals in the UK film calendar announced it’s line up. I recommend you snap up tickets to London Short Film Festival‘s Night of the Living Docs strand, which last year proved to be a marathon of films well worth staying up for. They’re screening some good’ns – I recommend catching Hunter (2009) by Federico Urdaneta, Kirran and the Hatchmaker (2009) by Amy Rose and Photograph of Jesus (2009) by Laurie Hill. Bunking down in in the Roxy Bar & Screen for a night of doc indulgence sounds like the perfect antidote to a cold January night. And whilst we’re on the topic of London festivals, I’d like to remind you that submissions for East End Film Festival are still open.

Some ramblings…

Finally, I thought I’d post something a friend of mine wrote in response to D-Word’s five day forum debate with Jon Reiss, author of Think Outside the Box-Office – The Ultimate Guide to Film Distribution and Marketing for the Digital Era. Tom’s response was a little sceptical, but refreshingly so. As Debra Zimmerman said at Doc/Fest a couple of months back – aren’t we all a little tired of talking about “new models of distribution?” I know, I know – we can’t ignore the white elephant, but it was interesting to hear Tom’s frustration (and fear) of what DIY distribution means to some filmmakers. On one hand it undoubtedly brings power back to the filmmaker (at last!), but with that, it also brings added responsibility and a fear that maybe we’re all going to end up forcing our films into a formulaic marketing spaghetti machine, resulting in thousands of blogs, Facebook pages and Twitter feeds around people’s projects, eventually filling our heads with an indistinguishable noise. Maybe he has a point. Though, I’m also a believer in the utopian undertones that these discussions bring. I shall stop rambling, and pass you over to Tom.

In his filmmaking opus Think Outside the Box-Office – The Ultimate Guide to Film Distribution and Marketing for the Digital Era, Jon Reiss (Bomb It, Better Living Through Circuitry) has created an impressiveencyclopedic tome that attempts to navigate its way through the murky waters of DIY film distribution. In the new year he plans to expand this into a tools website, where filmmakers will be able to share advice, including the names of ‘safe’ organisations to work with.

Through the documentary forum site The D Word, Jon is currently engaged in a five-day forum debate on the importance of DIY and other alternative distribution models. The questions raised have been varied and plentiful, with a general emphasis on the the individual importance of networking and hosting sites, whilst also accommodating more specific queries on the best DVD replication companies.

It’s hard not to admire Jon’s fresh approach to marketing and distribution, alongside other digital trailblazers such as Peter Broderick, Lance Weiler and Ted Hope, who are injecting new life into the old model. However, I find myself feeling somewhat detached and cynical at some of these changes; my own anxiety to this changing landscape is in part due to my lack of knowledge in this area. When first reading about the posibilities of DIY distribution, instead of seeing it as a potential life raft, I couldn’t help but view it as a distraction from what I think is most important – the film. In one of his forum posts, Jon states that your marketing strategy needs to kick in ‘as early as possible,’ a view that is all well and good if you have a team of people, however, if you’re one little person trying to deal with the day to day stresses of filmmaking, the reality is that you don’t have time for this. I also worry that premature promotion of a film (this, Jon suggests, should begin before the first shoot) will create a pressure to meet audience expectations that might not be present when the project is wrapped.I say this from experience. The film I recently finished endured so many changes, that anyone who had shaped certain expectations in their head would have been sorely disappointed when it was finally shown. I don’t pretend to know what the solution is – I’m very much a novice – however, my gut instinct tells me that a film needs room to develop organically, rather than  being molded by the expectations and hype of a faceless audience. Maybe I’m just anxious about learning a whole process, but I figured someone should hear about the filmmaker’s fear in this ongoing debate

Tales of the City

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009 posted by Helen Jack

New York characters in sound and images: One in 8 Million

New York characters in sound and images: One in 8 Million

As 2009 draws to a close, so does our It’s good to know…a film competition. Submissions closed on 30 November and we were delighted to see over 200 entries in only a couple of months. Well done 4doc’ers, we knew you had it in you. But it’s in the hands of the gods now as the esteemed judging panel (Jesus, Joseph and Mary) sit down to watch the films and make their decision. But rest assured, the winning films will be announced before 2010 creeps in so you shouldn’t have bitten all your nails off by then. We encourage you to still watch all the films in competition and ‘heart’ them until your pumping organ’s content. Whilst this doesn’t effect the outcome of the competition, we think you’ll certainly get a lot out of watching them. Support each other. It’s nice.

Speaking of great storytelling, I’d like to direct your attention to The New York Times’ One in 8 Million project. Working in a similar vein to Austin Lynch’s Interview Project, One in 8 Million tells the stories of ordinary New Yorkers whose city is both the setting and the catalyst for their tales of adventure, love and absurdity. Told against the backdrop of black and white stills, the format reminded me of the opening scene in  Manhattan (1979) – a kind of love letter to the city and its urban romanticism. Part radio documentary, photography exhibition and short film, One in 8 Million is simple but engaging in its storytelling. I recommend watching Joshua Caouette’s piece, which is sweetly naive but also insightful. For those of you who recognise the name, yes, he’s the son of doc filmmaker  Jonathan Caouette (Tarnation, 2003 and All Tomorrow’s Parties, 2009).

Finally, I want to flag up the UK broadcast premiere tonight of Eva Weber’s The Solitary Life of Cranes on More4 at 10pm (GMT). The film has screened at over fifty international film festivals including Telluride, Camerlmage, Seville and Sheffield Doc/Fest and has been nominated for the International Documentary Association Distinguished Shorts Award 2009. Make sure you catch it.

IDFA – it’s big

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009 posted by charlie

I’m your man in Amsterdam, or at least I was last week. I was atIDFA, the world’s largest documentary festival. They’re proud of their size, and rightly so – hundreds of films of all lengths and shapes, plus about 2500 visiting delegates. Most impressively, they have substantial public attendances, which is no mean feat for a documentary festival. They’re based in a major world cultural centre which I’m sure helps, but it’s a delight to see the public gorging on documentary.

People repeatedly ask me why I’m in Amsterdam – I think they mean it in a nice way, suggesting I should have been having a rest after Doc/Fest, but I think they also wonder what a festival person does at another festival when they’re not there researching for the programme. IDFA is an unusual one for me, because it’s more of a debrief for the Doc/Fest just gone than a prep for the festival coming, which is what festivals and markets usually mean in my schedule. I gather feedback from people who have gone from Sheffield to Amsterdam, possibly with Copenhagen in between. You tend to get the best feedback from people a couple of weeks after when the dust has settled and the relationships have blossomed. The working ones, I mean.

But enough of festival strategies. I spent a lot of my time at the FORUM which is their pitching forum and the general industry hang-out. You get a lot of talking in corridors and drinking of coffee, and some presenting of ideas too. It’s never possible to see all the projects being pitched because you’d go doolally, but of those I saw (from this list) I especially liked 10% (from a man being feted at the festival, Eyal Sivan – more on him below), Heavy Metal Islam (can’t fail with that name…unless it’s too much like Taqwacore, which is probably isn’t), The Immigration Project, The Pit, and To Marry My Mother. They were originals – that’s what I want when I hear of a new project. I get asked all the time what impresses me, and the concise answer is I want total face-slapping originality.

And I also enjoyed seeing MeetMarket projects from the last couple of years strutting their stuff – Farewell Comrades, Prison Valley, Donor 150, Inventando!, When They Are All Free, The Last black Sea Pirates and Sir Norman Foster, Free The Mind and Give Up Tomorrow. It’s a good plan to do a few of these pitching events, and carry through your connections and ideas. We’re all in this together in your service, us festivals, I hope.

I don’t normally get to see many films at festivals, least not in the cinema, because that’s not my bit of the Doc/Fest universe – sounds strange but I’m in the business of developing films on the up and not programming the finished things. But at IDFA I did watch quite a lot – seemed like a luxury to indulge in. And there were 2 I particularly urge you to look out for if they come near you – first, Jaffa, The Clockwork’s Orange, from Eyal Sivan. The history of Israel and Palestine through the Jaffa Orange, it’s an opinionated essay that informs and conceals its rage to deliver a nuanced and clear-headed account of orchards cultivated, neglected, reclaimed and destroyed. Sivan gave great Q and A, calmly critiquing some dodgy questions coming at him from across the spectrum and celebrating the watching of a documentary as a moment when we are all communally together without prejudice. Documentary is my model for peaceful cultural understanding, and I squirmed with delight as he said the same. Sivan also took part in a strained 2-hour session on the Middle-East and the Media. It’s not that it wasn’t good, it just reaffirmed everyones’ prejudices. Never going to be the communal understanding that Eyal proclaimed in his Q and A when there’s an audience mishearing and a stage of people proclaiming.

Second film I loved, and it has a similar ethos now I think of it, was Enemies of The People, featuring an amazing man whose family were wiped out by the Khmer Rouge, but who has not merely forgiven but also taken to interviewing some of the killers in order to provide a document of how misled people can be. He doesn’t blame or seek revenge, he understands that poverty and external domination creates a sense of powerlessness that leads to a loss of right and wrong. It’s totally pertinent as the UK continues to provoke further outrage across the world, to see a personal story of loss made into a political statement of the injustice caused by stupid and ignorant world leaders.

In both these cases, a superb statement of what documentary does with stunning power.