Posts Tagged ‘Doc/Fest’

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.

Shooting People and BRITDOC at Doc/Fest. Remember to breathe

Sunday, November 1st, 2009 posted by mullighan

so much to see and do!!

so much to see and do!!

Dear friends Shooting People and the Channel 4 BRITDOC Foundation are bringing more events to this year’s Doc/Fest than ever before – filmmaking on the frontline with the Frontline Club, Stich and Pitch, a Pub Quiz, What Filmmakers Can Learn from Pirates, the BRITDOC Bar (yes) and so very, very much more. Full details here. For those braving the Festival for the first time, the organisers want you to have this: the GoldenTicketGuide2009 (Note it’s a guide. Not a ticket).

There’s lots of Shooters going, and we’re hoping to all meet up, at t’ Bar, of course, and online.

Hope to see you there.

Come. Come to Sheffield.

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009 posted by mullighan
All aboard the good ship docfest.

All aboard the good ship docfest. Photo: Pixelwitch Pictures

You may know that, as a full member of Shooting People, you are entitled to a generous discount off the price of a delegate’s pass to the Sheffield DocFest. The price is £150+VAT, instead of £210. But you have to do this before the 26 October, when the discount expires, and the price goes up to over £260.

If you’re interested, write an e-mail to help at shootingpeople.org, with ‘yes I’m coming to Sheffield!’ in the subject, and we’ll sort you out.

4Docs – onwards and upwards!

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009 posted by Helen Jack

Charlie 4Docs is all about combining what was with what is - whether it’s adding new films to our archive, or building the wiki on foundations that had been already laid. So, with this in mind, we’ve invited Charlie Philips from the old 4Docs (or should I say, Fourdocs) team and asked him to say a few words to send us on our way…

Charlie here. If you don’t know me, I was at FourDocs from just after its invention in         October 2005 until April 2008. During this time, I oversaw its blossoming into a place where talent from across the world could experiment with short docs and show them off in a dedicated place where people interested in watching and making docs could support and advise them. We launched some really talented people into the 3 Minute Wonder strand on Channel 4, as well as festivals everywhere, and we toured around giving masterclasses and advice sessions to doc-makers very young and very older. We wanted to give a voice to everyone who thought they could communicate something through documentary, and it was all put in the context of a timeline of major doc events, technological leaps, and films in the 20th and 21st centuries.

Anyway, that’s the past, and I’m here to welcome the future. I’m really delighted that 4docs (with new spelling and all) is back up and running, with many of the features that it always needed to keep it fresh – especially the Wiki, which will be a vital place for discovering, and contributing to the new ways of making and seeing short docs. There is a mass of talented people out there making, or wanting to make, amazing factual stories on film – whether by necessity (usually) or choice (occasionally). If we want people like that to enrich the rest of the docs industry, progressing to making more docs seen by more people in more places, then there needs to be way more support and encouragement out there. Or bluntly, all those stories will be lost and all those filmmakers will have to get normal jobs. Which would be sad. Documentary is hip in my eyes, but it’s always fighting for its place in the mainstream. No one will support documentary and the industry if we don’t support each other.

So, I’m really excited by the thought of watching the community grow here – hope that all those energised FourDoccers of the past will return and take part, and that they’ll be joined by a new wave of committed 4docs contributors. In the old place, we were very good at showcasing talent and ideas, but maybe we didn’t get the communal feeling so right. In this new place, it’s all about contributing to the general good and sharing information and resources and it’ll only work if everyone joins in. A lot of the resources you see on the Wiki are those which allow filmmakers (often working in isolation) to be empowered by technology. But it’s still about people working together. Together, we can make something amazing happen with the next generation of documentary geniuses.

I’ll be checking into 4docs regularly, and you can also read more about what I’m doing now at Sheffield Doc/Fest, which isn’t half bad itself at supporting new documentary. Check out our blog

Charlie