How will the Vine app change the way we make trailers and promote films?
what does a 6 sec trailer look like?
How will the Vine app change the way we make trailers and promote films?
what does a 6 sec trailer look like?
Crowdsourcing is the thing now. When you want to make a film you take it first to family, friends, supporters and potential audiences. By the process itself of revealing your intentions in public, you transform an abstract idea (a dream?) into a plan. By asking for contributions in exchange for (clever, fun) rewards, your film becomes a project, one that you are responsible for. Just by posting on Kickstarter or Indiegogo (among others) you become a storytelling entrepreneur, a making-of artist in the web-circus.
What are you selling when you crowdsource? Your ideas, your talent, your role as an innovator in an innovator world
Your video. good=funds, bad=redo, rethink, remake.
Education with Wonder, now that’s inspiring. This TED Ed piece is maybe not the freshest egg in the barn, but if you haven’t seen it have yourself a mind-opening omelette.
Look for more work by African filmmaker Jeta Amata
Tweets @Jetaamata
follow @cinemahead for more movies that matter.
An OFS is an Online Film School.
Robert Rodriguez (El Mariachi, Spy Kids) wrote a “10 day film school” book. Other authors have since followed suit with How-tos books about how film is simple and the learning goes quick. Yes! it doesn’t take long to get with the fundamentals of making movies and, like with music and languages, kids learn it faster.
They are even better teachers. Infact some of the best film know-how is spread by Youth Cinema makers who grow up with open access to cameras and the digital realm . They can write and shoot without having to deal with gatekeepers or need the approval of adults or, god forbid, censors. And they have begun to think cinematic, too.
When a young filmmaker makes a film, you get two birds with one peanut: fresh knowledge is added to the common know-how. Youth Cinema pays its (dark) stars with love, learning and growth more than money. A key reward for a young crew is the knowledge and experience of the making-of, of taking the dream home as a festival film. How was the movie made? How were problems solved? That is practical knowledge that rarely fits in an a paper book.
As the internet spreads knowledge, I searched for and found a lot of online film schools. They seem run by young makers, producers and media entrepreneurs. A pool of makers and experts who offer film ABC, substance, and application.
ABC = Alphabetization: of film-making. Our environment remixes images, representation and duplication form the core of our communication-based evolution. the ABC of it is cinematic storytelling.
Substance: Online film schools often include technical content, aesthetics, philosophy, math, history, geography. Film may be passepartout to understanding knowledge as it changes, in practice.
Applications: The How to? Movies are problem solving adventures, experimental tests of will, desire and expectation. To realise what you wanted to say and how you did it a key step of personal empowerment.
A post will soon list our favourite online film schools.
D.
Two years ago Riccardo NERI produced the film H.O.T.
H.O.T. is a powerful doc about global Human Organ Traffic. It screened at festivals the world round. It helps raise awareness about the forced extraction of body parts, and the resale and distribution system behind it. Yes I know, you’ve heard about it, but this has narrative and visual detail. Did you see it?
Now Riccardo and his Rome-based company Lupin Film went fictional about the same crazy matter.
ELEVATOR trailer
The link opens the sales-teaser of the new film “Elevator”, a feature directed by Massimo Coglitore and written by Mauro Graiani and Riccardo Irrera.
“Elevator” presses key global buttons about the business of human organ trading.
It will be coming soon to a stairway near you.
ELEVATOR trailer
Take a look at Cinecore, the new production resource that just looks like it could solve a whole bunch of issues. It’s available for free, and that’s great for exploring the concept and the tools. But – be careful – it quickly asks for monthly subscriptions. For those I suggest you wait until your next budgeted movie in the making.
Creating & viewing locations from cinecore on Vimeo.
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