Documentary Insider

Straight to DVD is one way to go…

December 6th, 2005

A really great article in today’s LA Times about political films going straight to DVD.

    Discs are the new soapbox
    Highly political films make Hollywood skittish, so filmmakers with strong messages go straight to DVD, which are sold on the Internet.

    By Elaine Dutka, Times Staff Writer

    In these polarized times, there’s at least one thing upon which liberals and conservatives can agree: The political potential of film. DVDs, in particular, are regarded as a way of sidestepping a risk-averse Hollywood establishment and getting the message out.

    Launching this week, on the left side of the aisle: Ironweed, a San Francisco-based DVD-of-the-month club (www.ironweedfilms.com) that will disseminate “progressive” documentaries and feature films and also serve as a networking tool. As part of a grass-roots marketing campaign, groups such as MoveOn.org, the Progressive Majority, Working Assets and the Nation magazine have alerted their subscribers.

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    On the right: Eagle Publishing, a leading conservative publisher based in Washington, D.C., was selling so many DVDs through its book club that it recently set up its own DVD website (www.conservativedvds.com). A documentary about political commentator Ann Coulter, “Is It True What They Say About Ann?,” has sold more than 4,000 copies through the combined outlets. “Our website has only a couple of dozen titles, but we’re hoping for 100 before long,” said Jeffrey Rubin, editor of the book club and head of Eagle Publishing’s new DVD operation. “DVDs are democratizing Hollywood, making for greater diversity. Someone with something worth saying no longer has to be left out of the suite by a producer who’d rather be dead than make a movie that sniffs of anything conservative.”

    Ironweed is the brainchild of Tarzana native Adam Werbach, who, in the mid-1990s, became the youngest president of the Sierra Club at age 23. Werbach later switched his focus to producing benefit albums for the Beastie Boys and Pearl Jam, developing online ads for the Kerry-Edwards campaign and distributing video material to schools through his Act Now Productions. Building community — eroded by suburbanization and endless TV-watching, he says — is the primary goal.

    His DVD club, he says, is a synthesis of the “dry” efforts at social change and the jazzier world of show business.

    “Films are far better at bringing people together than elections, which people approach like medicine,” Werbach said on the phone from his San Francisco office. “Instead of being preachy and didactic, however, they must, first of all, be entertaining.”

    The club was inspired by the success of documentaries such as Michael Moore’s “Fahrenheit 9/11,” which created a new generation of social-interest documentarians, he says, and Robert Greenwald’s home video success with films such as “Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the Iraq War.” “Ironweed” refers to Werbach’s determination to “champion the weeds of the world — amazing pictures that fell through the cracks.” Members pay $14.95 for a monthly DVD selection. He’s offering two months free with a year’s subscription.

    Each month’s offerings will conform to a theme, the first of which is “boundaries.” The feature presentation is “Wetback: The Undocumented Documentary” by Arturo Perez Torres. The documentary, about two undocumented Nicaraguans apprehended at the Mexican border en route to Canada, won nine awards at U.S. film festivals and has played on TV abroad. Though National Geographic bought the foreign rights, domestic distribution never came to pass.

    Two shorts accompany the feature. In “Where Is Iraq?” filmmaker Baz Shamoun joins other Iraqi exiles on the Jordanian border, capturing their views of the Saddam Hussein regime and the Americans on the eve of the current war. In “Terminal Bar,” Stefan Nadelman illuminates the strange mix of characters at a New York City bar. Starting in January, the site will provide ways in which local events and screening parties can be organized — creating some buzz and, Werbach hopes, paving the way for theatrical distribution.

    Conservatives are playing catch-up, says Jim Hubbard, president of the American Renaissance Film Festival, an event featuring primarily right-of-center fare that is coming to Mann’s Chinese Theater from Jan. 13 to 15. For decades, he says, the conservatives’ focus has been on party building, alternative media such as talk radio and think tanks — virtually abandoning the arts.

    But more are climbing aboard the pop culture bandwagon — and technology is greasing the wheels.

    “The documentary ‘Michael Moore Hates America’ debuted at our festival and the DVD sold about 20,000 copies on our website alone,” Hubbard said. “That’s not a turn-of-the-head number for a studio executive, but it’s a huge opportunity for producers of low-budget films. Anyone with a camera and a good idea can compete these days because the cost of entry is very low.”

    DVDs are cost-effective in terms of marketing as well, notes Govindini Murty, co-founder and co-director of the annual Liberty Film Festival, Hollywood’s first film festival for conservative and libertarian filmmakers. “If theatrical is prohibitively expensive, DVDs are a great way to get out a political message,” Murty said. “You can get free media play in such conservative strongholds as the blogosphere and talk radio.”

    Maybe so, said Eagle Publishing’s Rubin, but more product must be generated. Conservative entities such as Citizens’ United have funded movies such as “Celsius 41.11,” a retort to Moore’s “Fahrenheit”; and “Broken Promises: The United Nations at 60,” which documents purported shortcomings of the world body, he says. And billionaire Philip Anschutz’s Walden Media is pouring money into family-friendly movies with Christian appeal, such as “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.”

    But until Rubin can be certain of 12 to 15 new quality titles each year, he’s sticking with a DVD website rather than taking the DVD-of-the-month route.

    Like Rubin, “Wetback” producer Torres has limited expectations. Although Ironweed is a positive step, he says, its influence is in doubt.

    “Though screenings can create word of mouth, you’re essentially preaching to the converted,” he notes. “How many mainstream moviegoers will know it exists? You still need promotion. Broadcasting my film [on TV] would reach those people who really need to be informed.”

Sundance 2006 doc lineup…

November 29th, 2005

From IndieWIRE: The complete list of documentary competition titles is published below. Spectrum, Park City at Midnight, and Frontier lineups will be announced Wednesday, November 30th at 1:00 a.m. ET and the Premiere’s section lineup will be announced on Thursday, December 1st at 1:00 a.m. ET. The festival’s short film lineup will be released on Monday, December 5th.

Independent Feature Film Competition: Documentary

    A Lion In The House,” directed by Steven Bognar & Julia Reichert
    Five diverse families — each with a child fighting cancer — navigate the ups and downs of treatment over six years, while maintaining hope in this complex portrait of human resilience. [World Premiere]

    American Blackout,” directed by Ian Inaba
    A stylish hard hitting documentary that recounts the fascinating career of Representative Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) and the suppression of the black vote historically and during the recent Presidential elections in Florida and Ohio. [World Premiere]

    An Unreasonable Man,” directed by Henriette Mantel and Stephen Skrovan
    Using rarely seen archival footage and over forty recently conducted on-camera interviews, this documentary traces the career of Ralph Nader from quixotic consumer advocate to upstart presidential candidate to public pariah. [World Premiere]

    Crossing Arizona,” directed by Joseph Mathew
    A balanced, far-reaching look at a range of human stories unfolding in the midst of Arizona’s illegal immigration crisis. [World Premiere]

    God Grew Tired Of Us,” directed by Christopher Quinn
    Four boys from Sudan embark on a journey to America after years of wandering Sub-Saharan Africa in search of safety. [World Premiere]

    The Ground Truth: After The Killing Ends,” directed by Patricia Foulkrod
    Reveals how the military trains our soldiers for war, the reality of combat in Iraw and the effects of this war on our soldiers coming home. [World Premiere]

    Iraq In Fragments,” directed by James Longley
    Contemporary Iraq is illuminated in three chapters that follow the diverse stories of Iraqis against a backdrop of war, occupation and ethnic tension. [World Premiere]

    Small Town Gay Bar,” directed by Malcolm Ingram
    A voyage to the deep South to tell a tale of the struggle for community and expression in the face of ignorance, hypocrisy and oppression. [World Premiere]

    So Much So Fast,” directed by Steven Ascher and Jeanne Jordan
    A black-humored cliffhanger of romance, guerrilla science and the redefinition of time. When Stephen Heywood finds out he has ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease), his brother Jamie becomes obsesses with finding a cure and the woman who’s falling in love with Stephen has a decision to make. [World Premiere]

    Thin,” directed by Lauren Greenfield
    With unprecented access and an unflinching eye, “Thin” documents 4 women struggling with anorexia and bulimia at a residential facility for the treatment of eating disorders in South Florida. [World Premiere]

    “‘Tis Autumn — The Search for Jackie Paris,” directed by Raymond De Felitta
    Explores the legendary jazz vocalist Jackie Paris’ meteoric rise, enigmatic career and mysterious life while probing the question of how much we need to know of an artist’s personal story to appreciate their art. [World Premiere]

    The Trials of Darryl Hunt,” directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg
    The wrongful conviction of a black man for a white woman’s rape and murder offers a provocative, haunting examination of a fear-based racially-biased community and criminal justice system. [World Premiere]

    TV Junkie,” directed by Michael Cain
    From the time he was born Rick knew he had a special purpose. If he could only record it he might be able to figure out what it is. 46 years, 5000 hours of video and over 3000 photos later he may have figured it out. [World Premiere]

    Wide Awake,” directed by Alan Berliner
    A first-person account of filmmaker Alan Berliner’s struggle with sleeplessness, as both a blessing and a curse. Portrait of an artist as an insomniac. [World Premiere]

    Wordplay,” directed by Patrick Creadon An in-depth look at ‘The New York Times’ crossword puzzle and its editor Will Shortz, and the wonderfully unique and loyal fan base he has built and nurtured during his 12-year tenure at the paper. [World Premiere]

    The World According to Sesame Street,” directed by Linda Goldstein Knowlton and Linda Hawkins Costigan
    A behind-the-scenes look at the unexpected dynamics of adapting the most-watched children’s television show for audiences in some of the world’s political hotspots and incorporating locally relevant themes. [World Premiere]

World Cinema Competition: Documentary

    5 Days,” directed by Yoav Shamir (Israel)
    On August 15, 2005, Israel began to evacuate 8,000 Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip. In a unilateral move by the Israeli government, they were removed from their homes to make way for 250,000 Palestinians. With exclusive access to the Israeli Defense Forces and the General in charge, seven film crews simultaneously follow key characters during this historic five-day event. [North American Premiere]

    Angry Monk – Reflections on Tibet,” directed by Luc Schaedler(Switzerland)
    A portrait of the rebellious Tibetan monk Gendun Choephel, this film reveals a face of old and present-day Tibet that runs against popular cliches. [North American Premiere]

    Black Gold,” directed by Marc Francis and Nick Francis
    A cinematic journey that uncovers the world of coffee and trade from the struggling Ethiopian bean grower to your coffee cup. [World Premiere]

    By the Ways, A Journey with William Eggleston,” directed by Cedric Laty and Vincent Gerard (France)
    A journey through the southern United States home of William Eggleston considered “the father of color photography.” Eggleston’s persistent silence defies each truth revealed about his character. [North American Premiere]

    Dear Pyongyang,” directed by Yang Yonghi (Japan)
    A Korean-Japanese daughter explores her father’s fierce political loyalty to North Korea – costly to the point of breaking up his family. [North American Premiere]

    The Giant Buddhas,” directed by Christian Frei (Switzerland)
    A film about the destruction of the famous Buddha statues in Afghanistan. An essay on fanaticism and faith, terror and tolerance, ignorance and identity. [U.S. Premiere]

    Glastonbury,” directed by Julian Temple (U.K.)
    A staggering range of music presented at England’s annual Glastonbury Festival, captures the spirit of important social changes over the last 30 years. [World Premiere]

    I Is For India,” directed by Sandhya Suri (England, Germany, Italy)
    A tale of migration and belonging, told primarily through Super 8 films and audio letters sent between India and England over a period of 40 years. [World Premiere]

    In the Pit,” directed by Juan Carlos Rulfo (Mexico)
    According to Mexican legend, whenever a bridge is built the devil asks for one soul, in exchange for keeping the bridge standing. This film chronicles the daily lives of the workers building a second deck to Mexico City’s Periferico freeway – their hopes, dreams and struggle for survival. [World Premiere]

    Into the Great Silence,” directed by Philip Groening (Germany)
    The first film ever to examine life inside the Grande Chartreuse, the mother house of legendary Carthusian Order. An austere, next to silent meditation on monastic life in a very pure form. [U.S. Premiere]

    KZ,” directed by Rex Bloomstein (U.K.)
    A look at the way thee town of Mauthausen, formerly the site of a German concentration camp, faces the ultimate demons of its dark past. [North American Premiere]

    No One,” directed by Tin Dirdamal (Mexico)
    The story of Maria, a Central American immigrant forced to leave her family in search of a better life. On her way to the United States, she crosses Mexico where she encounters a nightmare. [U.S. Premiere]

    The Short Life of Jose Antonio Gutierrez,” directed by Heidi Specogna (Germany)
    Behind the heroic tale of the first U.S. soldier to die in the war in Iraq, there unfolds the story of a Guatemalan street child drawn into war by the promise of a green card in a foreign country. [World Premiere]

    Songbirds,” directed by Brian Hill (U.K.)
    Downview Prison in England is host to 250 women who have committed crimes ranging from drug trafficking to manslaughter, but these women are also mothers and caretakers. In a musical set in the prison, the women sing about their lives and the crimes that led to their imprisonment. [North American Premiere]

    Unfolding Florence: The Many Lives of Florence Broadhurst,” directed by Gillian Armstrong (Australia)
    Flamboyant design pioneer Florence Broadhust lived a colorful life, but it is only now that her time has truly come, with her bold, exotic wallpaper prints in huge demand internationally. [World Premiere]

    Viva Zapatero,” directed by Sabina Guzzanti (Italy)
    A critical and playful look at censorship in Italy under Berlusconi contrasted with other European nations. [North American Premiere]

Independent Spirit Award documentary nominations 2006…

November 29th, 2005

From HollywoodReporter.com:

    Best documentary: Alex Gibney’s “Enron: The Smarest Guys in the Room“; Werner Herzog’s “Grizzly Man“; Scott Dalton and Margarita Martinez’s “La Sierra“; Mark Becker’s “Romantico” and David Zeiger’s “Sir! No Sir!

    The Truer Than Fiction Award, presented to an emerging director of nonfiction features: Rachel Boynton for “Our Brand Is Crisis“; Garrett Scott and Ian Olds for “Occupation: Dreamland“; Mark Becker for “Romantico“; and Thomas Allen Harris for “Twelve Disciples of Nelson Mandela.”

Sundance 2006 competition lineup announcement…

November 29th, 2005

I’ll post soon. In the meantime go here.

A friend of At Risk Films in theaters now…

November 28th, 2005

39 Pounds of Love is currently playing in NYC. Opens in LA Dec 2nd.

Why do I keep talking about this movie?!

Good Night, and Good Luck…

November 25th, 2005

Yesterday I saw Good Night, and Good Luck and I was struck by Edward R. Murrow‘s speech that both begins and ends the film. Murrow’s investigative journalism was controversial and innovative in the 50s and 60s. He attacked his stories with a passion that was rooted deeply in his heart and morals, to bring real news to the people via the television set. Here is a snippet from the end of his speech at the RTNDA Convention in Chicago October 15, 1958:

    To those who say people wouldn’t look; they wouldn’t be interested; they’re too complacent, indifferent and insulated, I can only reply: There is, in one reporter’s opinion, considerable evidence against that contention. But even if they are right, what have they got to lose? Because if they are right, and this instrument is good for nothing but to entertain, amuse and insulate, then the tube is flickering now and we will soon see that the whole struggle is lost.

    This instrument can teach, it can illuminate; yes, and it can even inspire. But it can do so only to the extent that humans are determined to use it to those ends. Otherwise it is merely wires and lights in a box. There is a great and perhaps decisive battle to be fought against ignorance, intolerance and indifference. This weapon of television could be useful.

To read his whole speech go here.

Movie theater irritation #12

November 22nd, 2005

People who take their shoes off.

Movie theater irritation #11

November 22nd, 2005

People who talk at FULL volume WHILE the movie is showing.

Wal-Mart movie and alternative distribution channels…

November 21st, 2005

On Saturday night a few friends and me went to the Media Action Project in Los Angeles to see Wal-Mart: the high cost of low price, the new documentary from Robert Greenwald. Greenwald’s previous works include, Unprecedented, Unconstitutional, Uncovered and Outfoxed. All of these films have used alternative means of distribution to get past the media and to the viewer. His company, Brave New Films, was built on the desire to build a movement. They have worked with organizations like MoveOn.org to get people to see the films, buy DVDs and discuss the issues and it has been phenomenally successful. There were over 1000 public screenings of Wal-Mart: the high cost of low price last week at homes, churches, yoga studios, anywhere with a DVD player and an audience.

According the Robert Greenwald’s email today:

    Norwich: “Wow. At the Norwich Public Library last evening we had to close the doors and turn folks away!”

    Milwaukee: “We were thrilled with the turn out and media coverage for our two screenings.”

    Portland: “Had a fantastic screening at Bridgeport UCC in Portland, Oregon on Saturday night… a packed house.”

    Flagstaff: “more then 800 people. … standing and sitting in the aisles. We have another screening planned.”

    Madison: “More then 900 people waiting in line in the snow to see the film.”

    from Santa Maria, California:

    “We published letters to the editor, put up posters and passed out flyers. At the premier the room was packed. The most crucial of the screenings was 48 hours prior to a city council meeting where slick Wal-Mart reps were coming to try and get the zoning code changed to allow for a 55 acre supercenter. At the city council meeting the chambers were packed…Empassioned by the stories in the film by people just like them, the chamber audience got a bit rowdy….Wal-Mart failed to get the council members approval with a vote of 5-0 against them! Thanks in no small part to your film, your alternative distribution strategy and dedicated local field producers like Bob Banner here in San Luis Obispo…the city of Santa Maria is safe! (for the time being)”

    The film is becoming the tool it is meant to be, going into the world and building the movement. Unlike traditional opening weeks, this one is just the beginning, and the fight will be a long and hard one, but with your help and support the film is touching hearts, changing minds and creating social change!

This film IS affecting change across the country. It is an excellenct piece of investigative journalism and explores the facts in an easy to digest (however outraged you may become) fashion.

The film does not exist to make money, but making money back is crucial. Wanna see the doc, go to their website and buy the DVD. They also have some great deals when you buy more than one. Time to pass out docs for the holidays.

As to alternative distribution, they seem to have it wired. In a time where it’s nearly impossible to make an overall distribution deal work for you, Brave New Films is figuring out how to make many deals and give back to and grow a community. People are turning to alternative media for the information they’re not getting from the mainstream and unconventional distribution is reaching those people.

When do I find out if my film got into Sundance?

November 18th, 2005

I was talking with a friend the other night about a film she is involved with, her fiancé wrote the project. They are waiting to see if the film got into Sundance. Now is the time for waiting.