Monthly Archives: June 2013

Play the game, get out of the office.

What makes a good game or a strong screenplay?
Both should be simple, engaging, and offer irresistible rewards.

Play this fresh original classic by the Mat Teubert. Hurry, before the work buries you and summer is lost.

http://pixelbreakfast.com/outbox

Screen Shot 2013-06-30 at 9.24.07 AM

For more on story development stop by www.cinemahead.com

Spielberg predicts “implosion” in the film industry.

From the Hollywood reporter:

Steven Spielberg predicted an “implosion” in the film industry is inevitable, whereby a half dozen or so $250 million movies flop at the box office and alter the industry forever. What comes next — or even before then — will be price variances at movie theaters, where “you’re gonna have to pay $25 for the next Iron Man, you’re probably only going to have to pay $7 to see Lincoln.”

George Lucas agreed that massive changes are afoot, including film exhibition morphing somewhat into a Broadway play model, whereby fewer movies are released, they stay in theaters for a year and ticket prices are much higher. His prediction prompted Spielberg to recall that his 1982 film E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial stayed in theaters for a year and four months.

The two legendary filmmakers were speaking at the University of Southern California as part of the festivities surrounding the official opening of the Interactive Media Building, part of the USC School of Cinematic Arts.

Lucas and Spielberg told USC students that they are learning about the industry at an extraordinary time of upheaval, where even proven talents find it difficult to get movies into theaters. Some ideas from young filmmakers “are too fringey for the movies,” Spielberg said. “That’s the big danger, and there’s eventually going to be an implosion — or a big meltdown. There’s going to be an implosion where three or four or maybe even a half-dozen megabudget movies are going to go crashing into the ground, and that’s going to change the paradigm.”

Lucas lamented the high cost of marketing movies and the urge to make them for the masses while ignoring niche audiences. He called cable television “much more adventurous” than film nowadays.

MeLTDoWN: with a little help from Yoko

make media that matters, personal action.

yoko says: active meltdown!

This is a repost of a Yoko Ono campaign from the Guardian. Grab your busy, inspired, crazy, shining life by the horns and say what think and show what you feel. About activism, apathy and silence of course. About personal passion for the places where Big Global meets Local and personal. Making one minute of honest media a day may also (eventually) lower unemployment levels (yours)…

https://witness.guardian.co.uk/assignment/51af32ffe4b0ae18e994afa7?INTCMP=mic_2029

Check out micro documentary films here

Can Hit-Film Scripts be driven by Equations and Data-bases?

Check out this article in my blog series about the Death of Cinema.

This is from the New York Times page. the article itself is not so revealing of any deep insights: Hollywood is data-analyzing films to predict box-office success. Like Netflix, Facebook or any other interactive service, use and preferences can and will be used for (or against) you. What is worth reading is the set of 300+ comments to this article, showing how many filmmakers hold different views.

Here is one comment, verbatim, the others you should check out yourself.

Pure Snake Oil
When you hire execs who can’t read a script, have no movie, literature, or artistic insight or training, you create a mentality that everything can be measured by meta-data and statistics. The best film experience is an emotional experience, connecting to the heart and soul of an audience. These are not the elements that an algorithm can measure, it’s a measure of humanity itself. It’s art. Why do multimillion dollar projects fail while there was a line around the block to see My Big Fat Greek Wedding? Answer– an emotional connection to the audience. While embracing statistics and algorithms to seek a formula for success and profit, these clueless execs are banking on failure.

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