Archive for October, 2009

David Lynch: Keepin It Weird

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

lynchOne of the most exciting things about the evolution in content distribution that’s happening now – scratch that: the revolution – is that content providers (otherwise known as “artists”) no longer have to limit their output to the kind of work that a megacorp feels is unchallenging enough to safely market to the masses.

But masses don’t consume art; people do. You do and I do. Each work of art is an individual opportunity for one person – the artist – to have an exchange of ideas with another person – the viewer or audience member. You or me. The megacorps that have, until the upheaval caused by the webbing of the planet, claimed for themselves all the control, and therefore all the access and the product, of these interchanges are scrambling to maintain a foothold on the increasingly shaky ground. Meanwhile, the control they’re losing their grip on is fragmenting and falling down around their feet, and being reclaimed by its rightful owners: the individual artists.

Case in point? David Lynch, who’s always been a maverick as a filmmaker and artist, has nonetheless always had to rely on the entrenched machinery of the established distribution system to get his art out there, so that you and I can interact with it. His work had to be big enough, in other words, to be worth the time and effort it took for a major studio to market it. If there’s no potential for profit, there’s no incentive to sell it. Because of course selling it has always been the only option.

So let’s raise a glass to the continuing dissolution of the old distribution model while we enjoy one of the many, many fruits of the process: these odd and beautiful little interviews with real people at David Lynch’s youtube channel.

Start with my favorite, the man whose life was changed by a visitation from the spirit of Stevie Nicks, and work your way through the rest of them. You’ll be glad you’ll did. You’ll be puzzled, and maybe a little disturbed, but glad.

Hear That Creaking? Another Vault Opens

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

murders_at_the_zoo_resize_1Following in the footsteps of Warner Bros, who thrilled film buffs this past March when they launched the Warner Archive, Universal Studios is making many of the titles in its vast library available on disc for the first time. In partnership with the cable channel and essential cinefile resource Turner Classic Movies (TCM), Universal is set to debut the new manufactured-on-demand service this Halloween season with five classic horror films:

Murders in the Zoo (1933)
Mad Doctor of Market Street (1942)
The Strange Case of Dr. Rx (1942)
The Mad Ghoul (1943)
House of Horrors (1946)

Keep an eye on the TCM schedule; many of the titles will be aired on cable in proximity to their DVD release dates.

Let’s hope this marks the beginning of a growing trend: there’s a tragically long list of important titles that remain completely unavailable to film buffs.

Disney Has a Marketing Panic Attack

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

d'Oh!Disney CEO Bob Iger has come out of the closet and acknowledged that the old distribution model is no longer viable. Yeah, I know, right? Disney!

In the face of falling DVD sales and the increasing viability of digital distribution, Iger was quoted in Monday’s Financial Times: “The business model that underpins the movie business is changing.” Iger goes on to say, “if we don’t adapt to the change, there won’t be a business – that’s my exhortation to my team.”

When the media giant of media giants – the tail that wags the movie marketing dog; the studio that, as much as any other single player, drives the marketing of films on this planet – publicly calls for a paradigm shift, then it’s time for the paradigm to shift.

Of course this is all old news at IndieFlix: we’re way ahead of you, Bob.

I Need Brains! IndieFlix Zombie Titles

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009
game over

A grisly scene from "Game Over"

I love Halloween. It’s not just the actual holiday that gets me excited, it’s the anticipation of graveyard-themed parties, ghoulish decorations and creatively weird costumes.

But more than anything else, I freakin’ love zombies.

Yes, zombies. Who better to ring in the holidays with than a mindless, brain-eating creature hellbent on destroying mankind?

The big question is, when the zombie apocalypse comes, will you be ready? You’d better start studying up on your zombie facts now because you never know when you’ll have to get serious in the war against the undead.

In the spirit of the season (and to help you prepare), I’ve compiled a list of our top zombie flicks, instant classics good for a scare at any time of the year.

Must….find…  BRAINS…..

Game Over: What would you do if you only had a few hours left to live… if you’d been bit by a zombie?! I’m going to DISNEYLAND!

Biohazardous: Zombies as creepy experiments in a haunted laboratory. GYAARRR!

A Feast of Souls: What are you doing here? You’re still alive? Sweet!

Deadscapes Broken Road: The scenery beyond is deader still. It’s all zombies as far as the eye can see….

Deadscapes II: Because one wasn’t enough.

Living Dead Lock Up: Escape is only the beginning of the end.

Living Dead Lock Up 2:  THE DEAD WILL MARCH! AGAIN!

Living Dead Lock Up 3: And you thought they’d all die in the first two! Think again!

Die and let Live: Here’s one for the girlfriend! A romantic comedy about killing zombies.

Feast of the Dead: Friends face the living dead. And kill each other.

Livelihood: They’re dead, but they’re not taking it lying down.

IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Freedom State Filmmaker Cullen Hoback Hosted By Lois Fein

Monday, October 26th, 2009

cullentakenbyharrysmaller-2

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IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast
“Here’s looking at you – the independent filmmaker”

Every Tuesday. A conversation with IndieFlix independent filmmakers –
producers, writers, actors, directors.

  • Listen NOW by clicking PLAY below

 
icon for podpress  IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Cullen Hoback Hosted by Lois Fein [25:37m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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  • Play Podcast Puzzle
  • Name That Voice
  • Meet Host, Lois Fein

10/27/09 Podcast:

The Cullen Hoback Interview

Cullen two

A conversation with independent filmmaker Cullen Hoback -
director and writer of Freedom State

Freedom State - Trailer

(10/27/09) (Total time – (25:37)

What’s inside The Cullen Hoback Interview?

  • Listen to the Movie: “Freedom State”  (0:52)
  • Cullen’s “eye for the (ab)normal”  (1:46)
  • Committing yourself to a “mental-rest home
    for the eccentric”  (2:26)
  • Finding the edge/end of the world  (3:48)
  • Making a film you want to watch over and over  (4:57)
  • What does “Freedom State” mean to Cullen?  (5:24)
  • “Sometimes you need to stir your life up”  (6:19)
  • “I need space”  (6:45)
  • The tragedy and beauty of “the human condition”  (8:55)
  • Who is crowding Cullen’s personal space?  (9:43)
  • “Freedom State” is one of the top sellers
    of Amazon VOD – why?  (10:50)
  • The False Apocalypse  (11:48)
  • “I blend improv into well-rehearsed scenes”
    and “happy accidents” occur  (14:38)
  • Cullen’s next film explores “What is real?  What is not?”  (17:04)
  • Audience reaction to “Freedom State”:
    “This is my new, favorite film!”  (19:23)
  • Cullen’s influences – directors and films (20:40)
  • “Finding a sense of purpose through imagination”  (22:52)
  • STILL FROM FREEDOM STATE

    STILL Freedom State

    Play “IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle” (10/27/09):


    Play “IndieFlix Name That Voice” (10/27/09):


    Meet Indieflix Podcast Host: Lois Fein

    seattle-songwriter-1111

    Lois Fein is IndieFlix Filmmaker Interviewer,
    Podcaster, and Host for
    IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
    Lois is a recording artist, songwriter, and performer.
    Her songs “It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon”
    are featured on IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
    Listen to more of her music from her debut CD
    Step Into the Water at: www.LoisFein.com

    _________________________________________________________

    Podcast Music Credits: “As Time Goes By” (Herman Hupfield);
    It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon” (Lois Fein
    )

    _________________________________________________________

    audio-technica-logo111skype_logo111

    Today’s edition of IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast was recorded with
    audio-technica’s AT2020 USB Cardoid Condenser Microphone,
    Skype™
    and CallBurner; and edited and mastered with
    Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH™’s WaveLab Studio 6
    .

    steinberglogo111wavelabstudio6logo111
    _________________________________________________________

    indieflixlogo111-1

    This edition of IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle and
    IndieFlix Name That Voice
    is sponsored by IndieFlix -
    “Connecting people through movies.”

    __________________________________________________________

    10/13/09 PODCAST ANSWERS:

    THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle (10/13/09) is
    “Singing karaoke at Passim”

    THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Name That Voice (10/13/09) is
    “All of the Above”

    __________________________________________________________

    10/27/09 Edition – IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast
    indieflixlogo111-1

Will “Paranormal Activity” Change the Face of Big Studio Marketing?

Monday, October 19th, 2009

paranormal-activity-movie-poster12The economic downturn has made us all think differently about how we spend money. It has cast a cloud of mindfulness over everything from weekly grocery shopping habits to the way entertainment is made and marketed.

Movie tickets are more expensive than ever and Americans are paying closer attention to what entertainment they spend their money on. Studios haven’t really caught on to that yet and continue to spend thousands of dollars marketing movies that flop. Audiences are trusting studio messaging less and less, instead relying on word-of-mouth recommendations and critic suggestions.

The story of Paramount’s new film “Paranormal Activity” is a fascinating look at marketing to today’s audiences. It has proven time and again that not every big budget studio release should have national, widespread screenings (case in point: “All About Steve.” ‘Nuff said.)

So how did the “Paranormal” director do it? The way most indie filmmakers start. With a good concept, a home video camera and a $15,000 budget. Writer-director Oren Peli had never made a movie before, but he knew that he wanted to make one about strange happenings in a house while everyone was asleep. Peli had lived what he thought to be a haunted house and he based the film off those experiences, trying, the whole time, to be “as real as possible.”

In an exclusive interview on Shock Till You Drop, Peli talks in-depth about his filmmaking process. He shot the entire thing over 7 days in his own home, which he spent a year preparing for. Not only did he write and direct the film, but he also edited, audio-mixed and casted the entire thing.

You can read the whole thing here.

After the film wrapped, Peli signed with Creative Artists Agency, which helped him get the film at the 2007 Screamfest Horror Film Festival and gave away DVDs to anyone who would distribute it. But even after the successful screening, it got denied by Sundance and no major distributors appeared. Eventually, it ended up at Dreamworks, where it sat in purgatory until it got into the right hands, which eventually led to Steven Spielberg.

Apparently, the film terrified Spielberg but talks were still floating around to remake the movie and be “in business” with Peli. However, a small stipulation in their contract saved the original. Studio execs agreed to see how audiences reacted to a one-time screening of the first film.

Audiences walked out. Not because it was horrible, but because it was horrifying. Still, the film was put on hold due to a contract renegotiation with Paramount Pictures. Peli and team kept pushing, however, and the positive buzz reinforced this fall’s release date.

Paramount online advertising executive Amy Powell decided go the viral online marketing route over hard-to-sell “this is what you should be watching” tactics generally employed by large studios. She credits Barack Obama’s White House win as her inspiration.

In mid-September, Paramount hosted 13 “college-town” screenings and Powell petitioned for audiences to demand hometown screenings by posting a call-to-action on eventfuls.com in what became the first viral marketing campaign of its kind from a major studio. The studio agreed that if the film got a million votes, they’d release it nationwide.

“Paranormal Activity” could be leading the way to cheap, long-term buzz marketing. Rather than relying on a dozen film previews before mainstream movie titles to predict top box office hits, audiences are watching movies with good content and word-of-mouth recommendations. “Zombieland” and “District 9” are case-in-point. Good movies, no-name actors and widespread social networking support.

The 13 sold-out screenings spoke loud and clear. Powell researched where the most interest for the film was coming from and then hosted eight midnight screenings in those demographics. The entire event was determined by Internet buzz and traffic numbers, not Paramount. When movie blogs Bloodydisgusting, ComingSoon and Fear.net got on board, the numbers went through the roof.

Fans started to “tweet their screams” and joined the Facebook group. When the demand hit a million, “You Did It!” messaging proclaimed loud and clear across the film’s web site. Audiences will get their screams and online marketing establishes itself once again as an effective way at targeting film audiences and delivering what they want to see.

So how could an indie filmmaker promote their film similarly? Take a cue from the Paramount execs. Add a “demand it” widget to your homepage. Link your Facebook and Twitter pages and get audiences involved in the screening process. Instead of advertising the film with only movie stills, try throwing a couple of audience reaction shots into the mix.

It takes cutting-edge and relevant content to make a successful film, but it also takes a bit of creativity. And, if “Paranormal Activity” suggests anything, you better act quick, because Hollywood is catching on.

Finding What Works in Film Marketing & Distribution

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Filmmaker Jon Reiss has spent a lot of time working the indie film market and has accepted, if not embraced, the marriage of filmmaking and marketing. He has written a much-anticipated book on the subject, called “Think Outside The Box (Office): The Ultimate Guide to Film Distribution and Marketing in the Digital Era,” which chronicles the lessons he learned while promoting his film “Bomb It,” a documentary about graffiti on five continents. The book is, he describes, a “360 page nuts and bolts guide to distribution and marketing for filmmakers,” which basically goes over all the things filmmakers have to think about when all the hard work of creating their art is over.

He deals with these subjects at length on his blog. His latest post answers a lot of questions about the state of distribution and marketing indie films and the steps filmmakers must take to make sure their work gets noticed in today’s economically challenging, online world.

You can read the whole thing here.

Not only does he advise working with distribution companies like IndieFlix that offer competitive profit splits, but he describes in detail a film’s “path to release.” It’s exciting that Reiss points out that blanket, untargeted marketing and simple “check this out” messaging simply doesn’t work for anything but multi-million dollar pictures.

Being able to find those niche groups and tailor your promotional messaging to them is an essential tool for indie filmmakers. Plus, audiences get genuinely excited about films they’re interested in watching because it relates to their own interests. In turn, those people are more likely to talk about it to friends who might enjoy it as well.

Marketing, Reiss says, “isn’t a dirty word – it is the way that filmmakers will connect with their audience.” I like that statement a lot – it’s something we try to emphasize to IndieFlix filmmakers on a daily basis. Marketing your film doesn’t make you a salesman or a shameless self-promoter… it’s the avenue you take to reach the people who probably don’t know about your film but would be very interested in it once they do.

Filmmakers have to include marketing in their filmmaking timelines. Reiss advises to start thinking about it “at inception… or at least in production.” It’s disappointing to work so hard, only to sign it all away and watch it drift into oblivion or collect dust on a library shelf. Taking control of the process, going in with a game plan and remembering who your audience is are all essential pieces to a successful launch. Trying to promote an indie film through the old-school studio distribution model is like trying to fit a circle piece into a square hole. Recognizing and accepting that fact is the first step to making a successful film and proactively taking control of your art.

The market is changing and evolving, so it’s important to stay flexible and experiment a little with marketing and distribution. I can’t wait to pick up Reiss’ book, because we’re all learning and are in this boat together.

Now Playing: The New & Improved IndieFlix!

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

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In the wee hours of Monday, October 12, the bleary-eyed IndieFlix staff bid farewell to the old site and ushered in the new.

It took years of planning and months of preparation, with an especially frustrating last few hours to make the final push. Ian D. and web guru Aaron Krill were in the office all weekend, until 5 a.m. that morning, preparing to go live before Scilla left the US for the Power to the Pixel conference in London.

One look at their exhausted faces and you’d think they just gave birth!

The new IndieFlix is user-friendly and aesthetically appealing. It’s a lot easier to find films on the new site, now that you are able to browse by extremely specific categories and narrow search results for shorts and features. But the most exciting part is that now IndieFlix users can participate in the film conversation by posting thoughts and comments on films they’ve seen, create their own profiles and build wish lists.

IndieFlix filmmakers also have more options to personalize their space on the new site, with new filmmaker bio links on their film profile pages. They can add personal biographies, a list of their previous works and production notes in that space. More great interactive features for filmmakers are coming soon, so keep checking back in to see what’s been updated.

The goal of it all is to build an indie film community online and bridge the gaps between filmmakers and their audiences. We want to make it easier for customers to find the exact film they’re looking for and provide a forum for them to talk about it and interact directly with the filmmakers. Before, we were unable to manipulate much of the site content, but now we really can create the store we all want to shop at and the kind of community we want to belong to, and hope you do, too.

Please browse our new storefront and be sure to send us any site tips or suggestions. There are new features slowly filtering through our testing stages and exciting new features will keep coming, so stay tuned!

IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Scott Kirsner, Author of “Fans, Friends & Followers: Building an Audience and a Creative Career in the Digital Age” Hosted By Lois Fein

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

moderatingatdigimart-sm

podcast111indieflixlogo111-1stream111

IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast
“Here’s looking at you – the independent filmmaker”

Every Tuesday. A conversation with IndieFlix independent filmmakers –
producers, writers, actors, directors.

  • Listen NOW by clicking PLAY below

 
icon for podpress  IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Scott Kirsner Hosted By Lois Fein [47:12m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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  • Play Podcast Puzzle
  • Name That Voice
  • Meet Host, Lois Fein

10/13/09 Podcast:

The Scott Kirsner Interview

scottkirsner_cinematech_07

A conversation with Scott Kirsner - author of
“Fans, Friends & Followers:
Building an Audience and a Creative Career in the Digital Age”

(10/13/09) (Total time – 47:12)

What’s inside The Scott Kirsner Interview?

  • How to make $1,000,000 in this new digital age  (2:25)
  • Stop thinking about the old model of “being discovered”  (3:01)
  • What are the new rules?  What’s the new paradigm?  (4:01)
  • Inviting the audience “in”  (5:08)
  • What mindset is required to reap the benefits of this new model?  (6:08)
  • The Internet is a great platform for getting help  (6:57)
  • Thomas Edison and collaboration  (8:50)
  • People you have never met can help you  (9:45)
  • Managing your collaborators  (10:25)
  • Getting your audience to spend money  (13:11)
  • Experimenting with “what is free” versus
    “what you pay for (and how much)”  (15:10)
  • “Live” events  (16:45)
  • Blending cinema, theater and interactivity  (17:34)
  • The future of film distribution –
    immediate and long-range  (18:54 & 22:10)
  • Paying attention to people’s desire
    for “immediate gratification”   (21:07)
  • Paying attention to behavioral shifts in how people
    communicate and consume  (23:38)
  • Core principles of distribution regardless of the
    technological landscape  (26:26)
  • How to get Scott’s book “Fans Friends & Followers:
    Building an Audience and a Creative Career in the Digital Age”  (28:13)
  • How well is Scott  implementing the practical advice in his own book?  (30:45)
  • How to “move the needle” on sales  (32:32)
  • What creative endeavor is Scott flirting with?  (33:37)
  • Scott on “performing as a stand-up comedian”  (35:50)
  • “The Conversation: The Convergence of New Technologies and Film”  (36:13)
  • “The issue right now is about: building an audience and making money”  (37:30)
  • Getting people’s attention  (39:01)
  • Creative entrepreneurs – what should we be paying attention to next?  (40:00)
  • What’s in “Fans, Friends & Followers” for indie filmmakers?  (42:37)
  • What to do if you are intimidated by technology  (43:58)
  • Scott on “the good life” (45:29)



indieflixlogo111-1

Book Cover: FANS, FRIENDS & FOLLOWERS:
Building an Audience and a Creative Career
in the Digital Age
cover-low-res-boxed

Play “IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle” (10/13/09):


Play “IndieFlix Name That Voice” (10/13/09):


Meet Indieflix Podcast Host: Lois Fein

seattle-songwriter-1111

Lois Fein is IndieFlix Filmmaker Interviewer,
Podcaster, and Host for
IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
Lois is a recording artist, songwriter, and performer.
Her songs “It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon”
are featured on IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
Listen to more of her music from her debut CD
Step Into the Water at: www.LoisFein.com

_________________________________________________________

Podcast Music Credits: “As Time Goes By” (Herman Hupfield);
It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon” (Lois Fein
)

_________________________________________________________

audio-technica-logo111skype_logo111

Today’s edition of IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast was recorded with
audio-technica’s AT2020 USB Cardoid Condenser Microphone,
Skype™
and CallBurner; and edited and mastered with
Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH™’s WaveLab Studio 6
.

steinberglogo111wavelabstudio6logo111
_________________________________________________________

indieflixlogo111-1

This edition of IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle and
IndieFlix Name That Voice
is sponsored by IndieFlix -
“Connecting people through movies.”

__________________________________________________________

9/29/09 PODCAST ANSWERS:

THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle (9/29/09) is
“$60”

THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Name That Voice (9/29/09) is
“Sandor Lau – director,
writer and co-producer of Squeegee Bandit
__________________________________________________________

10/13/09 Edition – IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast

If I Could Travel Anywhere This November…

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

home…I would definitely go to the CineFantasy Festival in São Paulo, Brazil.

The intense country will serve as the perfect backdrop for a film festival dedicated to things that live in the dark – horror, sci-fi, fantasy and all things supernatural.

Last year’s event boasted an attendance record of 3,000 people who watched over 160 films on 72 screens. The entire festival is free, with conferences, special guests, lectures and workshops.

This year, the CineFantasy Festival will give away “The Master of the Scream” Award to the film that terrifies the audience to a fever pitch. 12 other, more traditional-sounding awards will be given out as well.

IndieFlix films Eel Girl and  El Hilo De Oro (The Golden Thread) are slated to screen. The festival runs Nov. 6 – 15th.

As soon as I learned about CineFantasy I raced to compare rates on travel web sites and start planning my trip. Unfortunately… it’s a bit out of my price range right now. But hey, I can dream, right? I’ll settle with Bobo de Camarao and tequila shots, curled up on the couch watching Eel Girl.

Which isn’t really all that bad of an idea.