Independence (13 Entries)

Independence is hard to define, and the fine details are a constant topic of debate. For me, independence is a movement across a number of media and business niches, a series of methodologies for the common problems of media creators. This independence movement, ever hastened by digital production and distribution advances, means that musicians, filmmakers, publishers, video game developers, software publishers, and entrepenuers have a lot to learn from each other.

"Undiscovered Gems" in Bay Area

I neglected last week to point out the film series indieWIRE is helping with at the California Film Institute (part of their fifth anniversery), based upon our "Best Undistributed Films of 2003" list. Still some great films to see up there if you are in the Bay area, and in indieWIRE we're using it as an excuse to check in on the status of those projects. Great screenings continue through April 15th.

posted to Film & Video on April 05, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (251) | TrackBack (1202)

Secret Settlements

So the "screener ban" fiasco that started last year was always an interesting story (at least for indieWIRE) and its twists and turns ends with a sour note. Recap: MPAA bans screeners for the Oscars siting it as a source of piracy; protests emerge and the MPPA adjusts the ban; a number of indies suggest a settlement, MPAA says no fueling more debate; consortium of indies files suit and wins a preliminary injuction ... much crowing and tooting of horns ensues. But the fact that now the case has been settled and the terms are secret brings us back to the question of "who is independent"?

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posted to Independence on April 01, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (342) | TrackBack (809)

Even More on Ebaying Rights

Just saw another trackback appear to this article looking at the Ebay sale of the rights of "Alvarez & Cruz" and figure I should update people. Well, a funny thing happened on the way to publishing B ... the deal fell through. The filmmaker Vince Lozano reports, "We have bad news...Girl and a Gun films only could come up with part of the money. So we decided to move on. We still believe Ebay is a viable option for selling independent films if it's properly promoted. The good news is we have interest from another company. I guess the moral to the story is if you don't have the money don't make a bid."

posted to Independence on March 24, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (485) | TrackBack (804)

DVD Self-Distribution, Part 1

I linked yesterday to a story Peter Broderick wrote for DGA Magazine on distribution options back in January -- it's a great primer on many of the issues related to decisions facing independent filmmakers on the business end. It also makes the argument that "filmmakers may be better off making other types of video deals [than typical industry deals]." As prep for a discussion I'm having with the guerilla film marketing class at the UCF Film School tommorrow, I wanted to start outlining some of those issues on self-distribution of DVDs as a filmmaker.

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posted to Independence on March 24, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (336) | TrackBack (2)

David Ball & The Fourth Wall

Speaking of SXSW, Glenn Otis Brown posted about the panel he hosted there on Creative Commons and filmmaking, especially showcasing some of the efforts of David Ball (a first time filmmaker) and his Fourthwall Films, who's decided to use CC rather than traditional distribution and why he hopes people will remix his film. Ball wants to "seed a movement" where the filmmaker and the audience are more closely linked.

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posted to Independence on March 23, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (391) | TrackBack (434)

Distributors-for-Hire

The concept of "service deals" for independent filmmakers is an emerging one in the indie film space, one that generates criticism from some and talk of new paradigms from others. These service deals used be the last resort for filmmakers who couldn't find traditional acquisition, but that business model is changing, and Rania Richardson wrote a great article for us in indieWIRE looking at that in depth (after the topic was part of the buzz surrounding the Florida Film Festival and SXSW.)

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posted to Film & Video on March 23, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (503) | TrackBack (4)

BitTorrent + BitPass: Ethos & Practicalities

On the surface, the ideas of micropayments and download swarming don't seem immediately compatible -- micropayments seem most effective for small fees, and download swarming encourages a rushing to the tipping point of efficiency that micropayments seem like a barrier in achieving. From a video standpoint, though, they are both solutions to bandwidth cost issues that prevent more Internet publishing of "big media objects". The relatively trivial technical issues to deploy a BitTorrent + BitPass combo, however, belies the real puzzle underneath -- how the "ethos" of the BitTorrent community interacts with the model.

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posted to Emerging Systems on March 17, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (619) | TrackBack (2443)

More on eBaying Film Rights

I hardly thought it was my most interesting blog entry, but the story turned out to be more interesting and more fiercely independent that I imagined. Yes, filmmakers sold the global rights to their film on eBay -- but the more interesting aspect is who bought it and why.

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posted to Independence on March 15, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (443) | TrackBack (867)

Creation As Play

Today I moderated the Florida Film Festival panel on "NextArt", the two-year-old sidebar on new media and "entertainment of the future" (cue the sci fi music). We spent most of our time talking about play as the natural creation process. On the panel were ILL Clan founders Frank Dellario and Paul Marino ("infamous" filmmakers of the machinima variety), as well as Toy Symphony creators (and M.I.T. Media Lab developers) Tod Machover and Tristan Jehan, plus Lisa Delgado (who writes for Wired and RES).

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posted to Independence on March 12, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (438) | TrackBack (859)

Hollywood, Department of Missed Opportunities

Carl Diorio in Variety says that Newmarket "could be termed the department of missed opportunities" for failing to put more money into (and thus gaining more control over the revenues of) "The Passion of the Christ" and "Monster", criticizing them for not "raking in the bucks" the way they could have.

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posted to Independence on March 09, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (419) | TrackBack (1560)

"The Passion" As Indie

When Eugene writes that we had "another installment in an occasional indieWIRE office discussion about the definition of independent film" when discussing whether or not "The Passion of the Christ" should be included in our indieWIRE:BOT tracking of independent and speciality films, he's hinting at one of the more interesting "What is Indie?" discussions we've had as a staff in a long time (something that started last week, even.) When you apply the checklist of "indie film traits" against "The Passion" it meets more of them than the average Miramax or Sony Picture Classics release, even though something feels totally different about the scale.

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posted to Independence on March 03, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (206) | TrackBack (1803)

All Charts Are Political

"All charts are political," said my friend and former Three Minute Dog conspirator (my little indie record/promotion outfit that preceeded GMD Studios) Steve Fox. He was talking, specifically, about how independent musicians (and the rag-tag independent radio promoters who serve them) game the charts in college radio through reporting outlets such as CMJ. I was thinking about the box office charts we keep over at indieWIRE and wondering why we don't see more gaming surrounding that chart: we certainly made it political enough.

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posted to Film & Video on February 25, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (384) | TrackBack (3039)

Sarah Jacobson Still Kicks Ass

A week ago today, Sarah Jacobson died. I heard about her passing Sunday, and the ripples of her influence keep bouncing around the indie film community. In typical Sarah fashion, the influence she had on all of us and our definition of independence continues to be her most lasting contribution (although "I Was A Teenage Serial Killer" and "Mary Jane's Not a Virgin Anymore" are wonderful inspirational legacy of their own.)

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posted to Independence on February 20, 2004 | Permalink | Comments (273) | TrackBack (1051)




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