no shit

The porn industry is collapsing!

Since it’s often seen as a couple of steps ahead of Hollywood, will Hollywood collapse?

Fritz, B ~ Tough times in the porn industry (10.08.2009)

Good, but written by a film buff/festival lover.

“[...] Despite popular opinion, no [film] festival ever makes a profit. They’re all subsidised.”

Sometimes it appears the festival sector has expanded to service the rise in production. Certainly mediocre films seem to find slots on the festival circus with alarming ease.”

Attendance at MIFF: 185,000 (2009?), “the nation’s most popular film event by far.” SFF: 135,000
“New viewing devices such as video iPods and iPhones and the advent of viewer-generated content are revolutionising the way people access an relate to the moving image.”

“Already there is talk of the need for ‘digital film festivals’, where films can be downloaded instead of projected in cinemas. This seems to be missing the point. Film festivals are never just about showing films. They’re about the collective experience, appealing to our instinctive need for gregariousness and sense of community.”

“It’s no accident that the trend towards downloading music coincides with a huge rise worldwide in the popularity of live music. Filmfests, for all their worship of two-dimensional images, are essentially live events—they have more in common with arts festivals than they do with cinemas.”

“But if the programs are larger than they were in the 1960s and 1970s, it reflects the way that audiences have changed. No longer is there a single, relatively homogenous audience that turns out annually to see a certain type of art house film.”

“[...] Watching a film in a festival is not like seeing it in release.” In wide release (cinema, DVD, etc.).

“The sense of occasion, often packed cinemas, the presence of filmmakers, the ability to measure films against each other, significantly enhances the experience.”

“Without distributed titles [cinema, DVD, etc.] the festivals would become more elite. Lacking the drawcards that appeal to sponsors, government and a more general film-loving public, it’s hard to see how they could survive financially.”

“For all the pressures on them—financial, technological, increased rivalry—festivals that respond strategically and adapt to changing circumstances are likely to thrive. The main reason is that independent and art house cinema is in commercial crisis around the globe. Titles that used to be assured of a cinema audience are dying. Because the old release patterns are no longer working, distributors are likely to look to the festivals as part of their launch strategies even more than they do already. And because fewer titles will be bought for cinema distribution, the festivals will retain their core role of screening aesthetically interesting work otherwise difficult to see on the big screen. Festivals will remain a bulwark against Hollywood-led blockbuster aesthetics and homogenisation, an important avenue of discovery where viewers will continue to give themselves permission to take risks, to broaden and deepen their experience and appreciation of cinema.

Barber, L ~ CAL/Meanjin Essay: A Fistful of Festivals (01.08.2009)

storyworld

storyworld

“Storytelling is going through an evolution. The impact of new technologies combined with an audience that has more control over its media is challenging everything from revenue models to authorship.”

“The way I write has fundamentally changed.”

“The Concept Of Story Architecture: What was once a single-format design for me is changing. I now consider my process akin to architecture, where storytelling, technology, gaming, delivery and experience design work together to serve the stories I wish to tell. The process starts with the creation of a storyworld bible, a document that provides an overview of the experience that I wish to create.”

“What’s interesting is that story architecture borrows from a number of other industries. For instance there are elements of “beta testing,” where the audience comes in and tests the storyworld similar to the practices of software developers. There is the creation of a storyworld bible, which has similar elements that are found within the game bibles often used by the gaming industry. Finally there are flow and mapping phases that are similar to how Web sites are designed. Overall these design elements are intended to help make the storyworld engaging and social. ”

Cinema has had a good run. It came of age in the last century. And don’t get me wrong — I’m not declaring the death of cinema, I’m merely suggesting that storytelling is adapting for a new century, one in which the world is connected in ways never before possible. But ironically, in order to go forward we are drawing from a precinema past, when the art of storytelling was an experience and its authorship was not held by one but many. A time when stories were freely passed from one individual to another, and along the way embellished by those who told them.

Weiler, L ~ Lance Weiler explains why filmmakers should expand their films into a “storyworld.”

category: PhD sources
tags: ,

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“This project may not engender the kind of engagement it set out to initially generate.” A slight understatement?

Emergent Digital Grassroots eXpo (edgeX) is some kind of social networking site aimed specifically at Ipswich residents?

8
“Knowing that a “build it and they will come” attitude will fail [...].” Perhaps in the case of Ipswich as a city, but QUT has an established community and students who WANT outlets for their ideas.

Rain partners with others to launch cinema-on-demand in April 2008 in Brazil (?). It will be called MovieMobz, which will “book film screenings of new and old features as well as niche content.”

Films will be distributed via satellite of Comsat.

“MovieMobz plans to open subsidiaries in Argentina and Mexico this year.”

Edit 02.2009: It seems like MovieMobz is working in Brazil!

Rain Network
MovieMobz
Variety ~ Digital logs Demand (26.02.2009)

A new indie distributor for world cinema has been founded in the USA.

They have a very different approach from Hollywood and probably all the others too: “we take reduced distribution fees, we report monthly, we have transparent book-keeping and we keep our expenses chargeable to the pictures to a bare minimum. Our goal is to make money hand in hand with the producers, not to make money at the expense of the producers.”

If the concept works they will open a subsidiary in Germany and they will produce films.

Screen Daily ~ NeoClassics’ new wave of world cinema (21.02.2009)

category: PhD sources
tags:

The most complete list of web series I found so far.

List of Internet television series

Indie film maker who distributes his films himself. He grossed $5m with his past 2 (?) projects.

For his newest project HIM he wrote a film script which extends to “an alternate reality game, episodic shorts for the web or mobile platforms, interactive live events and an online graphic novel,” which he all produced himself.

“HIM at its core is a film with a strong story. These other platforms are ways to build on that story. It’s not just gimmicks, they all serve the story.”

Now THAT’S what I’m talking about!

Lance Weiler’s multi-screen ambitions (19.02.2009)

It will also be released via Bittorrent and advertised on Mininova.
“This site combined with the other bit torrent sites will expose the film to more that 60 million viewers alone.”

Mininova
New film to be released across all platforms (18.02.2009)