Telluride by the Sea films announced
Get the full scoop on the lineup and festivities here.
"The Jesus Guy" to premiere in Birmingham, AL
No money. No home. No name. What kind of person gives up everything to spread the Word of God? To some, he’s an inspiration. To others, a threat. So, what in God’s name is he doing, traveling across country and through a dozen countries? Director Sean Tracey traces the enigmatic odyssey of the anonymous, barefoot preacher known as “The Jesus Guy.” With the intimacy of single-camera filmmaking, we walk in his steps as he encounters both skeptics and believers, changing them…for better, for worse, forever.
New Hampshire filmmaker Sean Tracey has completed his new documentary, "The Jesus Guy", and the film has been selected to screen (and have its world premiere) at the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival in Birmingham, Alabama. The festival runs September 28-30. Sean Tracey has been directing TV commercials for over 15 years and this is his first documentary film.
For more information on the film, including information on Sean and his relationship with friend and mentor Albert Maysles, visit www.thejesusguy.com.
Saint-Gaudens film to screen at Smithsonian
The September screening will be preceded by an afternoon symposium beginning at 1:30 p.m. guest speakers will include George Gurney, Deputy Chief Curator of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and Henry Duffy, Curator of the Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, among others. A reception will follow the screening and the event is free and open to the public.
For additional information on the symposium, click here.
"Common Threads" to premiere Sept. 15
New Hampshire
Telluride by the Sea unspools September 21-23
[From our friends at The Music Hall in
It’s coming on September and time for the acclaimed Telluride by the Sea, The Music Hall’s nine year long collaboration with the producers of the Telluride Film Festival. This unique and intimate Portsmouth event treats audience members from across the Northeast to an exclusive peek into the Telluride experience - packing one September weekend with the latest international cinema, private parties, great music, delicious food, and inspired conversations with sympathetic cinephiles of all ages, tastes and backgrounds.
Telluride by the Sea is a young relation to the 34 year old Telluride Film Festival held every Labor Day weekend in Telluride, Colorado in a tiny box canyon in the heart of the Rocky Mountains. In a carefully hand-picked selection of films, the festival in
For more information on Telluride by the Sea, click here.
"E.T." 25th Anniversary Screening feat. Dee Wallace
Boston selected for free film fest tour
Read more about it here.
SNOB Film Festival stacked up with Sundance
"There will be more than 170 film festivals in the United States this year, in locales from Park City, Utah (Sundance), to Concord, New Hampshire (the Somewhat North of Boston, or SNOB, Film Festival), according to the Internet Movie Database. Many local and state governments fund robust incentive programs to lure production companies. And with advances in digital video, local filmmakers are becoming ubiquitous."
Okay, so its one line - but hoorah for SNOB for being mentioned in the same breath as Sundance!
"The Toll" in Animation World Magazine
Screenplay of local film in bookstores
GOFFSTOWN
Hailed by HBO coverage as a "surprisingly moving piece about teen life" and Republic Pictures coverage as "beautifully written, heartwarming, and quite charming," "Dribbles" tells the story of a talented high school artist who suddenly decides to prove himself to his runaway father by winning a championship basketball jacket.
"Dribbles” was shot in the fall and winter of 2005 in
The paperback edition features the complete shooting script of the film illustrated with still photographs, a production guide, and the end credits of the film.
The book is available at area book stores and online at Barnes & Noble, Borders, and Amazon.com. More information about the film, including a list of local outlets carrying the screenplay, can be found at the official film web site, www.dribblesmovie.com.
Film Baby: Self-distribution for filmmakers
[Upon returning from my vacation, I’m now wading through my inbox and posting items that some of you may find of interest. We’ve had a number of discussions and panels recently involving distribution alternatives and I figured that some of our filmmakers might find this press release from Film Baby worth exploring. DISCLAIMER: I regularly post items of interest that cross my desk – they are meant to be informational only. This is in no way meant to be taken as an endorsement by the New Hampshire Film and Television Office.]
FILM BABY opens up self-distribution frontier for filmmakers
Members now have one-stop access to Super D, Netflix, Cinema Now and Amazon CustomFlix – as well as wide exposure on Google Video, Ruckus Networks and Sony Connect PSP
Tired of waiting for your big theatrical or DVD break? Wondering how you’re going to repay your investors, so you can get on with your career? Film Baby – a spin-off of the legendary CD Baby – has opened up the self-distribution frontier for independent filmmakers through a series of groundbreaking partnerships.
Besides providing a popular online channel to indie fans for DVD sales, Film Baby now gives member filmmakers direct access to Super D, Netflix, CinemaNow, and Amazon CustomFlix – representing a range of distribution opportunities that typically require representation by a professional sales agent. Among them, every Film Baby title with a barcode is now automatically available to over 2400 chain and independent music stores through Super D (one of the world’s largest wholesalers of DVDs). Furthermore, member’s films can receive immediate consideration for acquisition by Netflix and digital downloading through CinemaNow. Filmmakers set their own retail and wholesale prices (with the exception of downloads), while Film Baby facilitates and handles all the processing, shipping and collections – with full payments to members on a weekly basis. The only charge to members for the spectrum of services now offered is a one-time set-up fee of $39.95 per title and a flat commission of $4 per unit sold.
To support the growth of the independent film community, Film Baby has also set up promotional partnerships with Google Video, Sony Connect PSP and Ruckus Networks to provide members with additional marketing exposure to millions of potential new customers. A two-minute trailer/clip for each Film Baby title will be featured on Google Video with a direct link to its sales page. Members can also reach the coveted 18-to-35 key demographic by offering their films for download from Sony Connect to be played on Sony gaming devices PSP and PS3 and Ruckus Networks’ digital entertainment service to over 900 university campuses – both with direct links back to their Film Baby sales page.
Based on the successful model that has allowed CD Baby to pay its members over $47 million to date, Film Baby makes it possible for filmmakers with marketing savvy to finally fully maximize earnings from alternative distribution. As an example, for a DVD sold through Film Baby at $19.95, a member would collect $159,500 for each 10,000 units sold; $1,595,000 for each 100,000 units; and $15,950,000 for a million units.
Best of all, Film Baby’s services are non-exclusive. Filmmakers retain all rights to their work and can terminate their membership at any time. Filmmakers are paid each Monday for sales during the previous week, including through Film Baby’s distribution partners, and have instant access to their sales data 24/7. The one-time set fee of $39.95 per title includes a dedicated web page on Film Baby’s newly-upgraded site – featuring a two-minute trailer or clip for the film or video, a high-res scanned image of the DVD/video cover, a link to the official website, and all the descriptions, press coverage, critical reviews and bio information the member chooses to include. Film Baby also reports all sales to VideoScan, which collects and disseminates weekly sales data for the industry to The Hollywood Reporter, Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Billboard and other outlets.
For more information about Film Baby services, visit www.FilmBaby.com.
"Disappearances" to screen in Warner
Free screening: "Burden of Dreams"
MacDowell Colony to screen film by 2007 MacDowell medalist, Les Blank
On Friday, August 3, 2007, at 7:30 p.m., The MacDowell Colony will present a free screening of Burden of Dreams (1982), a film by this year’s Edward MacDowell Medalist, maverick documentary filmmaker Les Blank. Considered by many to be Blank’s best film, Burden of Dreams documents German filmmaker Werner Herzog’s five-year attempt to complete his epic feature Fitzcarraldo in the Amazon jungle. Honored with a British Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1982, Burden of Dreams — a fascinating glimpse into the moviemaking process — reveals just how far one man will go to bring his creative vision to life.
With a running time of 95 minutes, the film will be shown at the Peterborough Historical Society at
Regarded as one of the seminal figures in documentary filmmaking, Blank has explored a wide range of subjects in his work by profiling passionate people at the periphery of American society. He has uncovered Polish-American polka musicians (In Heaven There Is No Beer?), Appalachian fiddlers (Sprout Wings and Fly), and American tourists in
Blank will receive the Edward MacDowell Medal in a public ceremony during the annual Medal Day celebration on Sunday, August 12, 2007, beginning at 12:15 p.m. on The MacDowell Colony grounds in
To learn more about The MacDowell Colony or Medal Day, please log on to www.macdowellcolony.org and sign up for the e-News bulletin.