February 1, 2018
Nail Art, Inclusive Design, and Everyday Ways to Fight Oppression: Social Impact Track Sessions For SXSW 2018
The desire and motivation to do good has a snowball effect, and when one person speaks up, it has the power to permeate society. The SXSW Social Impact Track highlights activists, storytellers, entertainers, nonprofits, foundations and social enterprises creating impact and contributing to a better world. This March at SXSW, the Social Impact Track will address topics ranging from tangible ways media influencers can advocate for change to the development of civil rights for cyborgs.
During the Social Impact Track hear from activists such as Manal al-Sharif and learn how anyone can create change and generate social impact. In 2011, as part of the Women2Drive campaign, Al-Sharif daringly filmed herself driving in Saudi Arabia and posted the video to YouTube. SXSW Programmer Tammy Lynn noted, “Although Al-Sharif didn’t actually break any law, she and her fellow agitators successfully broke the taboo and demanded an end to the ban. This September, Saudi Arabia announced that they plan to lift the ban on women drivers, effective June 2018. See Al-Sharif speak, along with other remarkable women in the Social Impact session, Everyday Ways to Fight Oppression.”
Dive deeper into the Social Impact Track from March 10-14 during SXSW Convergence programming. SXSW Convergence programming features a range of topics that straddle the cultural and technological intersection at the heart of SXSW with primary access granted to all SXSW Badges.
Social Impact Session Highlights
Everyday Ways to Fight Oppression
Speakers: Manal Al-Sharif, Thor Halvorssen (Human Rights Foundation), Leyla Hussein (Dahlia Project), and Maria Toorpakai Wazir (Maria Toorpakai Foundation)
Repressive regimes use many tools to keep power, and now people everywhere are fighting back with ordinary actions. Hear how a computer scientist in Saudi Arabia challenged the government by driving a car; how a psychotherapist in the UK used creativity to combat violence against women; and how a girl in Pakistan defied the Taliban by playing squash. During this panel, moderated by the Human Rights Foundation, these women will show how anybody can make an impact and bring about social change.
Tiny Canvases: Identity and Protest through Nail Art
Speakers: Meghann Rosales (Nails Y’all)
Meghann Rosales is a nail artist and owner of Nails Y’all in Austin, TX. With a background in cartooning, she specializes in hand-painted miniature portraits of people and pets. She draws heavily on politics, feminist iconography, pop culture, and art for design inspiration. Her nails have appeared in The Atlantic, Whole Foods, and The Rachel Maddow Show.
Meghann was raised in Houston and moved to central Texas in 2001. Prior to opening her business in 2011, she earned a Master’s degree in education from Fordham University in New York City, where she taught high school history and admired her students’ amazing manicures.
There Is No Other Hand: Inclusive Design & Kids
Speakers: Jordan Reeves (Born Just Right), and Jen Lee Reeves (Born Just Right)
A blast of glitter from a kid-invented, 3D-printed unicorn horn shaped prosthetic arm is helping change how we think about disability and inclusive design. 11-year-old Jordan Reeves and her mom, Jen Lee Reeves, share how Jordan’s opportunity to enhance her limb difference with a creative design has pushed the tween forward as a spokesperson to help reshape how we think about disability and inclusive design. The two will share the path they are taking to change attitude and industry.
Cyborg Pride – An Introduction To Cyborg Identity
Speakers: Richard MacKinnon (BorgFest Human Augmentation Expo), and Kevin Welch (EFF-Austin, Digital Arts Coalition)
Come and celebrate Cyborg Pride with Borgfest and EFF-Austin! Borgfest director Rich MacKinnon and EFF-Austin president Kevin Welch will talk about their collaboration to create the world’s first Cyborg Pride parade to raise visibility for this emerging population of humans and to increase awareness of the civil rights issues that surround being a cyborg. With Cyborg Pride, they hope to give cyborgs, cyborgs-in-waiting, and their allies a place to celebrate cyborg identity.
Browse All Social Impact Sessions
Crossover Track Recommendations
Explore topics outside of your focus area and learn from SXSW sessions across all 24 Tracks of Conference programming. These recommended sessions are outside of the Food Track but will interest any SXSW attendee.
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What About Us: Ableism and Disability in the Media
– Kristen Parisi (Writer)
Track: News & Journalism -
Blockchain for Refugees: Economic Passports
– Ashish Gadnis (Banqu)
Track: Startup & Tech Sectors -
Emoticulture: How Data & Science Create Happiness
– Saleem Alhabash (Assistant Professor), and Marcus Collins (Doner)
Track: Brands & Marketing
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Purchase your SXSW Badge and reserve your hotel today to experience these sessions along with 10 days of screenings, showcases, exhibitions, networking, and more this March 9-18 in Austin, TX. Take the Tracks Quiz to discover which badge will suit your needs.
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Teaser Photo by Jon Currie
The post Nail Art, Inclusive Design, and Everyday Ways to Fight Oppression: Social Impact Track Sessions For SXSW 2018 appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
January 29, 2018
How to Get Started with Instagram Storytelling
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With all the latest talk about Facebook changing their newsfeed’s algorithm and the inevitable comparisons to Instagram (aka maximal vs. minimal design approaches), I’d like to focus our upcoming Visual Storytelling Today show on Instagram and how visual storytellers like you can take advantage.
As Alexis C. Madrigal aptly defines Instagram in a recent article on The Atlantic:
“Instagram does not pretend to be part of the public sphere. It is not the natural home of #theresistance. It’s a place for the Sunday’s-best version of your personal life to have space on the internet.”
Instagram is one of the fastest platforms that experienced a tremendous growth in recent years. With over 800 million users as of September 2017 – that translates into 1 out of 3 US Adults have an Instagram Account.
And marketers did take notice. In fact, 70.7% of US businesses are using Instagram in 2017, exceeding Twitter for the first time.
According to a recent New York Times article:
“One study, published by researchers at the University of Oregon in 2016, found that the use of image-based platforms like Instagram and Snapchat was associated with lower levels of loneliness among users, and higher levels of happiness and satisfaction, while text-based platforms had no correlation with improved mental health.”
So, if you find yourself using Instagram more as a way to unwind vs. text-based platforms like Facebook and Twitter, then there is some truth in these research findings.
With this in mind, our upcoming guest is Julie Cabezas, a co-founder of The Ideal Marketing Agency based here in South Florida. Julie has loads of expertise transforming brands into what she calls “Little Black Dress Brands” on Instagram.
Here is a sneak preview of what we’ll cover in our upcoming chat:
How would you pitch the benefits of Instagram to business leaders?
Instagram is all about relevancy. Instead of visiting a company’s website, many consumers now check Instagram to get a feel for the company’s worldview. Instagram shows customers in a very real way, how the brand relates to your customer’s life.
What are the typical business objectives marketers could use Instagram for?
People really don’t want to see brand information on Facebook. The culture is about family and friends – hence the radical shifts Facebook is making to their algorithms. On Instagram, it’s completely the opposite. That’s where we want to keep up with our favorite brands. On Instagram, your brother’s trip to Mexico is actually slightly less interesting than the content your favorite brands and celebrities are posting. So I think Instagram, and platforms like it, are the future of the brand-consumer connection.
Where do you see the future of Instagram storytelling headed?
Instagram storytelling is going to be – not only the visual pulse of the world – but the new wave of publishing. I’m not sure why anyone would buy a magazine these days when you can follow your favorite magazines on Instagram and get much fresher content.
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Source: Visual Storytelling
January 28, 2018
Sundance Documentaries Were First-Rate, But That Doesn’t Mean They’re Coming to Theaters
What makes a documentary suited to a theatrical release—and all the expense and effort associated with it? And when are they more appropriate for smaller screens? After several straight months of disappointing box-office sales for most nonfiction films, including several hits from last year’s Sundance, this question would seem to be a pressing one out of this year’s film festival. But the answer—as evidenced by the few distribution deals that closed before and during Sundance, those that are still pending, and those that should be—isn’t so easy to nail down, though some combination of topicality, celebrity or artistry certainly comes into play.
Before Sundance kicked off, Oscar-winner Morgan Neville’s Mister Rogers film “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” was one of the few documentaries to already have a major theatrical distributor (Focus Features) behind it—and its rapturous Park City unveiling appeared to justify it. Unlike its description might suggest, the film transcends the standard bio-pic format to become a highly resonant and timely look at America’s culture wars. Who would have thought that a Republican cardigan-wearing Presbyterian-trained minister with a message of tolerance and civility could be our best response to the current President? Set to ignite political debate at the same time as it soothes liberal arthouse audiences, it was one of the festival’s most uniformly embraced docs.
Magnolia Pictures’ mid-week acquisition of “RBG,” a lively, though conventional portrait about Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, is also instructive. While the film offers a straightforward and hagiographic account of the judge’s rise through the ranks of America’s patriarchal institutions and her close marriage with Martin Ginsburg, there’s nothing particularly captivating here—except for the fact that it’s a rousing activist cry for one of the year’s most significant issues: Women’s rights. If Magnolia’s release of “I Am Not Your Negro” was able to capture last year’s “Get Out”/Black Lives Matter zeitgeist, “RBG” will only become more relevant as Trump continues to attack her and search for her replacement—a fact that makes this documentary one of the festival’s most timely.

“RBG”
For a more punk-rock feminist portrait, there was the Joan Jett film “Bad Reputation,” another chronological survey of a life’s upswing within a male-dominated system. Though likely to play better to the musician’s fan base, the rock-doc also taps directly into the contemporary women’s power movement, showing the life of Jett as a female trailblazer who didn’t give a damn and paved the way for women in the music industry.
There were many—probably too many—other profiles of famous people, including “Jane Fonda in Five Acts” and “Robin Williams: Come Inside My Head,” both set for HBO broadcast, as well as traditional portraits of director Hal Ashby (“Hal”)) and artist Yayoi Kusama (“Kusama – Infinity”). What makes these nonfiction films more befitting a night out at the movies versus cozying up with them on the couch?
Among the best of the HBO docs, “King in the Wilderness,” a compelling and astutely constructed archival-driven look at the last contentious years in the life of Martin Luther King, Jr., stands out precisely because it’s not biographical tribute, but a focused chronicle of a combustible time when the stakes reached a fever pitch for the Civil Rights leader. But while “King in the Wilderness” is riveting and relevant to the persistent struggle for racial equality, its historical framework may limit its theatrical prospects.
On the other hand, “Three Identical Strangers,” purchased by Neon mid-week, reflects what it takes to make a film break out without celebrities or timely issues. Reminiscent of last year’s Sundance true-conspiracy docs “Tickled” and “Icarus,” “Strangers” has that WTF-mystique built into its sensationalistic narrative of triplets separated at birth who only learned of each other when they were 19-years-old. But what begins buoyantly, full of fun ‘70s reenactments and archival footage of their brief time in the limelight (they appeared briefly with Madonna in “Desperately Seeking Susan”), eventually turns darker and, as a result, becomes a more enriching and emotional experience about fathers and sons, nature versus nurture.

David Kellman, Eddy Galland, and Bobby Shafran in “Three Identical Stangers”
Courtesy of Sundance Institute
This year’s U.S. Documentary Competition, as always, had its fair share of straight-up advocacy docs (“Inventing Tomorrow,” “Dark Money,” “The Devil We Know,” “Kailash”), all of which will find their niche audiences. But the future of the section’s most cinematic docs is uncertain: Robert Greene’s “Bisbee ‘17,” an elegiac and captivating journey into American history, identity, and division, as enacted by a small Arizona town; RaMell Ross’s “Hale County, This Morning, This Evening,” a strikingly photographed, impressionistic study of black rural Southern life; and Michael Dweck’s “The Last Race,” an operatic Gates of Heaven-inspired look at stock-car racing and its fading Long Island community.
If any of this year’s non-fiction achievements should be experienced on the big screen, it’s these. You can also add in Sandi Tan’s World Documentary Competition title “Shirkers,” a film critic’s darling, which features cineastes and lots of classic film clips, as it follows the filmmaker’s quest to uncover the truth behind her mentor, and the unfinished independent movie he stole from her years before. But it’s unclear if theatrical distributors will take a risk on this type of film. Is aesthetic creativity and mastery enough to propel it into cinemas?
There were other competition docs that shrewdly combine sensitive observational filmmaking with larger social agendas, such as the excellent “On Her Shoulders,” “Crime + Punishment,” and “Minding the Gap.” In each case, the filmmaker takes a central issue and deepens it with penetrating explorations of character. In “On Her Shoulders,” director Alexandria Bombach tracks ISIS victim-turned-activist Nadia Murad in her campaign to raise awareness for her ethnic group’s devastation, but the film’s quieter in-between moments and intimate portraiture powerfully expresses the painful slog and personal psychological toll of making social change.
Similarly, Stephen Maing’s “Crime + Punishment” is an essential investigative documentary about corruption in the NYPD department, whose illegal quota policies continue to disrupt communities of color, but the film comes alive with its empathic look at its whistleblowing cops, particularly Edwin Raymond, a well-spoken officer who eloquently speaks truth to power. Bing Liu’s “Minding the Gap” also skillfully balances social issues with compelling characters as it follows several years in the lives of a group of skateboarding male friends in the Midwest as they grapple with the legacy of family abuse. In previous years, the strength of content in these three films may have been enough to push them into wider distribution, but nowadays, it may not be enough.

Kendale McCoy in “America To Me”
Courtesy of Sundance Institute
But maybe the definition of “theatrical” matters less these days anyway. Consider that two of the biggest nonfiction productions at Sundance, hailing from Oscar-nominated filmmakers Matthew Heineman and Steve James, respectively, are TV projects. Heineman’s multi-faceted expose of the opioid crisis through the eyes of the growers, addicts, cartel bosses and law enforcement officials will premiere on Showtime on February 2. And in the largest documentary deal of Sundance, Starz reportedly paid $5 million to acquire James’ 10-part series “America to Me,” a binge-worthy longitudinal study of race—and racial disparities—in education as seen through the microcosm of one large suburban Chicago high school, and its cast of eminently engaging students and teachers. If Heineman and James don’t need theaters, maybe the rest of Sundance’s doc-makers don’t, either.
Source: IndieWire film
January 28, 2018
‘Blaze’ Review: Ethan Hawke Directs a Gonzo Indie Country-Western Opera About an Unsung Legend — Sundance 2018
Some people never get to realize their full potential, or stick around long enough to do what they were so clearly put on this Earth to do. Maybe they die young, or maybe they just keep getting in their own way. Or maybe, if they’re anything like singer-songwriter Blaze Foley, they find a way to do both, burning out like stars that leave their light behind. But Foley never wanted to be a star, shining only for itself. He wanted to be a legend, and live forever. Thanks to Ethan Hawke’s slippery, whiskey-soaked biopic of the late musician — and newcomer Benjamin Dickey’s casually spellbinding lead performance — he’s closer than ever to getting his wish.
Described by its director as a “gonzo indie country-western opera,” “Blaze” is sleepier and more bittersweet than Hawke might have you believe, less of an opera than an acoustic requiem for a ramblin’ man. Flowing backwards and forwards through time like a set list, this languid tribute might frustrate anyone hoping for a conventional portrait in the style of “Walk the Line,” but there’s something ineffably honest to Hawke’s freeform approach. The contours of Foley’s legacy were as soft and imprecise as the contours of his body, and there’d be no way to measure his life in ticket sales, venue sizes, or the handful of unforgettable live recordings he committed to tape before he was killed in 1989.
So Hawke wisely decided to ditch the womb-to-tomb approach and re-imagine Foley’s journey as a fragmented story of paradise lost. Lucinda Williams once said that “Blaze Foley was a genius and a beautiful loser,” and co-writer Sybil Rosen is the living embodiment of what he lost (this movie was adapted from her memoir). Played by a tender and emotionally limpid Alia Shawkat, Rosen meets Foley at a theater program somewhere in Arkansas, and the unlikely romance that develops between the petite Jewish girl and the hulking singer from the Deep South forms the most important and involving of the film’s various threads.
Draped in shades of autumnal brown and left to unfold with the gentle patience of domestic bliss as Foley and Rosen squirrel themselves away in the woods, these scenes are the heart and soul of a movie that does a better job of illustrating love than loss. Dickey and Shawkat have a relaxed and lived-in vibe together — his voice drawls out in deep scoops of countrified wisdom, and she curls up inside them — and their relationship is the kind that somebody sings about for the rest of their days. It’s the strongest part of a life that’s held together with duct tape (Foley’s adhesive of choice), and it’s genuinely painful to watch it pull apart.
The film’s other two points of focus are both located after that split, though Hawke cuts between all three of them with increasingly little rhyme or reason. One is set some years later in the back of Austin’s Outhouse bar, where a gloriously bearded Foley plays his most famous show to an empty room in the middle of the day. Every song triggers another memory, most of them taking us back to the woods. These scenes feel more like a seance than anything else, as Dickey so completely disappears into the role that it feels like Foley has come back to life for another devastating rendition of “Picture Cards Can’t Picture You” (it’s such a remarkable feat of reanimation that it makes Gary Oldman’s performance in “Darkest Hour” look like an “SNL” sketch). These scenes are drunk with sadness, Foley in particular, and provide Hawke’s story a beacon to return to whenever the telling gets a bit too unmoored.
The final thread finds two of Foley’s closest pals— musicians Zee (Josh Hamilton) and Townes Van Zandt (a perfectly cast Charlie Sexton) — conducting a posthumous radio interview for their late friend. The interviewer has never even heard of Blaze, and so Zee and Van Zandt begin spinning some yarns of their own. This is how the movie allows for a hazy subplot in which Steve Zahn, Sam Rockwell, and Richard Linklater(!) play a trio of dumbass cowboy record executives — it doesn’t amount to much, but it sure is fun to watch.
Shambling on for more than two hours of disjointed memories, “Blaze” isn’t in much of a hurry to put the parts of a life together. The film isn’t a jigsaw puzzle, where every piece neatly fits into a greater whole; it’s more like a drunken night of people sitting around and remembering their old friend, warts and all. The upside of this impressionistic approach is that it allows for a kitchen sink kind of storytelling, paving the way for all sorts of detours, like a one-scene cameo from Foley’s senile dad (played by Kris Kristofferson, of course) and a handful of long jokes that all add some real texture to a bygone era of outlaw folk.
The downside is that Foley tends to slip away from us as the movie goes on. We can see that he’s living like he’s not going to be alive much longer, but the slipstream narrative keeps us on the outside — just like everyone else — desperate to understand how he could be so sweet and self-destructive all at once. Hawke keys in to the banality of Blaze’s behavior, the world shrugging this guy off this mortal coil in the end, but the film leaves us with almost as little as he did: just a few great songs, some scattered moments of sullied joy, and the unfulfilled wish that it had all come together in a more meaningful way.
Grade: B-
“Blaze” premiered in the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. It is currently seeking distribution.
Source: IndieWire film
January 28, 2018
Meet Netflix’s Indie Content Team, at Sundance and Beyond
On opening night of Sundance 2018, writer-director Tamara Jenkins premiered her new film “Private Life” to rave reviews. The New York drama was headed for derailment when she submitted it to Netflix Indie Content directors of content Ian Bricke and his lieutenant Matt Levin; they loved her script about an infertile middle-aged couple (Paul Giamatti and Kathryn Hahn) desperately trying to have a child by any means necessary. The drama turned out so well that Netflix is holding it for the fall festival circuit.
Among those in Eccles Theater seeing “Private Life” for the first time was Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos. That’s because if a film is budgeted under $10 million, he delegates full greenlight authority to Bricke, who pushed the $9 million “Private Life” into production and approved the last-minute casting of unknown actress Kayli Carter.
Netflix Indie Content is also bringing (if not to a theater near you) Charlie Kaufman’s adaptation of Iain Reid’s bestseller “I’m Thinking of Ending Things,” which he will direct. They’re also preparing to release a new collaboration with “Green Room” director Jeremy Saulnier, the father-daughter story “Hold the Dark,” starring Alexander Skarsgard and Riley Keough.
Clearly, Netflix is leaning into under-served audience segments. In the NIC 2018 pipeline are five features from female filmmakers: Nicole Holofcener’s suburban mid-life crisis dramedy “The Land of Steady Habits,” starring Ben Mendelsohn and Connie Britton; Haifaa Al-Mansour’s African-American self-discovery dramedy “Nappily Ever After,” starring Sanaa Lathan; Lauren Miller Rogen’s comedy “Like Father,” starring Kristen Bell and Kelsey Grammer; writer-turned-director Marja-Lewis Ryan’s heroin drama “6 Balloons,” starring “Broad City” star Abbi Jacobson and Dave Franco; and Olivia Newman’s Sundance Labs project “First Match,” set in the world of a New York girls’ high school wrestling team.
There’s also “The Raid” director Gareth Evans’ return to Wales with crazy period horror thriller “The Apostle,” and “Eggplant Emoji,” which Bricke described as an “outrageous boy comedy, ‘Superbad’ with a severed penis,” he said. “You can be successful by being specific, without the P&A risk.”
Sarandos has placed Indie Content under the supervision of Original Films head Scott Stuber, who oversees such bigger-budget films as Will Smith-starrer “Bright,” Angelina Jolie’s “First They Killed My Father,” Bong Joon-ho’s “Okja” and Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman.” Stuber approves Indie Content films over $10 million and carries his own greenlight authority.
“We saw there was a real audience for all shapes and sizes of movies,” said Bricke, “even modestly budgeted films in the Duplass zone. The economics of buying after-market from distributors tends to drive up the cost, and we had a challenge getting access on a worldwide basis. So we said, ‘Let’s engage early to help the movies get made, and have access to all rights.’”
Being able to acquire worldwide rights isn’t always easy. Which is why over the past few years, Netflix has slowly increased the number of its in-house productions. At about 20-25 films a year, Netflix’s Indie Content division produces more than a major studio; however, few of these titles surface at film festivals or theaters. (Some might define these programmers as TV movies.)
For example, the Duplasses produced Hannah Fidell’s 2015 romance “A Teacher,” starring Taissa Farmiga; Mark Duplass produced, wrote and starred in Alex Lehmann’s “Blue Jay” (2016) with Sarah Paulson; dystopian “Io” (2017) starred Margot Qualley as a girl deciding whether to remain on an abandoned Earth; and Josh Charles plays a coach in “Amateur” (2017), starring Brian White as a basketball star, among countless small Indie Content titles most of Netflix users have never heard of.
The only way Bricke and Levin’s small staff (which gets support from the larger motion picture operation) can handle this volume is by paying close attention to development — and then letting things go. Their chief of physical production, indie producer Jeremy Walker (“Half Nelson, “Sugar”) is also on the case. Clearly, Sarandos has to delegate to his TV and film teams to keep the content churning through the system, as the level of production keeps rising, year after year.
In any case, Netflix acquisition czar Matt Brodlie did not end up buying anything at Sundance 2018, partly because he didn’t have to.
The rules of engagement at Netflix Indie Content are the same as any specialty studio: Match the budget to its audience. Of course, Netflix doesn’t have the friction of luring people to a brick-and-mortar cinema, and they boast the ability to reach multiple niche audiences via targeted, sophisticated marketing and those mysterious algorithms, created by some 1,500 engineers.
“You present a movie to an audience in personalized ways based on viewer behavior,” said Levin. “When creating artwork for the platform, we have 15-20 pieces leaning into different thematic and graphic elements. It lets you talk about the movie in different ways.”
How did these films do? Some suggest that movies get lost in the ether when they disappear into the endless Netflix content maw. To the contrary, says Bricke, these films have a long tail, pulling viewers long after they first appeared on the site. “We keep finding pockets of audience for movies,” he said. What that means, of course, is anyone’s guess: We will never know the numbers.
“Private Life”
At Sundance 2016, writer-director Macon Blair pitched Bricke and Levin the dark romance “I Don’t Feel At Home in This World Anymore,” which swiftly went into production that February. Less than a month after the film won the Grand Jury prize at Sundance 2017, it was on the streaming service. “Normally film fans all around the world hear about a new Sundance discovery and want to see that movie,” said Levin, “and have to wait six months [or more] to see it in that territory, missing out on the window when it was in the zeitgeist.” (They claim the film was a huge success.)
The other NIC titles at Sundance 2017 were Gerard McMurray’s black-college fraternity story “Burning Sands,” Sydney Freeland’s teen heist comedy “Deirdre and Laney Rob A Train,” and Charlie McDowell’s sci-fi thriller “The Discovery,” starring Robert Redford, Jason Segal, and Rooney Mara.
This year, Netflix brought another four titles to Sundance, two from NIC: Joshua Marston’s African-American drama “Come Sunday,” starring Lakeith Stanfield, Jason Segel, and Chiwetel Ejiofor and David Wain’s National Lampoon biopic “A Stupid and Futile Gesture” starring Will Forte and Emmy Rossum; both earned mixed reviews. Netflix Original Documentaries’ Lisa Nishimura brought series “Wild Wild Country” and the feature “Seeing Allred.” By the very next weekend, true to pattern, “A Futile and Stupid Gesture” was available on the site and in a smattering of Netflix partner iPic theatres.

“I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore”
The Netflix advantage extends to presenting their movies simultaneously around the world in 190 countries, with subtitled and dubbed versions in 30 languages. “We knew we could find an aggregated audience all over the world for movies that felt small or specialized that wouldn’t necessarily get to travel in the conventional distribution system,” said Bricke. “Maybe the audience for a Duplass film in Scandinavia is small, but it’s there.”
Netflix also says it doesn’t have to cater to the tastes that drive foreign sales companies. Among the hits Bricke and Levin cite from last year were two Stephen King movies that debuted at Fantastic Fest’s 2017 edition: “Gerald’s Game,” starring Carla Gugino as a woman trapped in a room after husband Bruce Greenwood suddenly dies, and “1922″ starring Thomas Jane. “Mike Flanagan wanted Carla Gugino,” said Levin, about the director of “Gerald’s Game.” “It’s about casting the actor meaningful to the audience it’s for, like an actor from Doctor Who that’s resonant in that market. Compromising creatively is not a great way to make a movie.”
Clearly, Netflix is betting heavily on Indie Content, and is only going to keep ramping up the volume and budgets under ex-studio player Stuber’s direction. How he manages quality control and marketing and branding these titles — which can’t all go to festivals — is the major question going forward.
Source: IndieWire film
January 28, 2018
Sundance 2018 Awards: All of IndieWire’s Reviews and Video Interviews
Sundance announced its winners last night, with “The Miseducation of Cameron Post” and “Kailash” taking the top prizes. IndieWire has been in Park City for the entirety of the festival, with dozens of reviews and video interviews to show for it. Here’s what we’ve had to say about the prizewinners:
U.S. Dramatic Grand Jury Prize: “The Miseducation of Cameron Post”
U.S. Dramatic Directing Award: Sara Colangelo, “The Kindergarten Teacher”
U.S. Documentary Directing Award: Alexandria Bombach, “On Her Shoulders”
U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Award for Achievement in Acting: Benjamin Dickey, “Blaze”
U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Award for Excellence in Filmmaking: “I Think We’re Alone Now”
U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Storytelling: “Three Identical Strangers”
U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Breakthrough Filmmaking: “Minding the Gap”
World Cinema Documentary Directing Award: Sandi Tan, “Shirkers”
World Cinema Dramatic Audience Award: “The Guilty”
Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award: Christina Choe, “NANCY”
NEXT Audience Award: “Search”
NEXT Innovator Award: “Night Comes On” and “We the Animals” (TIE)
U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Prize: Alfred P. Sloan Prize: “Search” (previously announced)
Source: IndieWire film
January 28, 2018
‘The Shape of Water’ Gets Oscar Boost as ‘Hostiles’ Lures Crowds
Following last week’s Oscar nominations, Fox Searchlight’s “The Shape of Water” and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” led the field of Oscar contenders. Both films showed healthy jumps over last weekend, with Guillermo del Toro’s showing the most strength.
While both films were outgrossed by 20th Century Fox’s “The Post” in much wider release, they did add around $21 million to their impressive totals so far. That’s far above boosts for last year’s “Hidden Figures” and “La La Land.”
This weekend will be the high water mark for the nominees, with the next weeks seeing normal drops and in some cases possible alternative home viewing (several titles are nearing the three-month mark when streaming becomes a choice). It remains to be seen what will replace them in theaters after what has been a strong awards season boosting grosses above average for the last few months.
Among the openers, the sole new release to show any strength was Strand’s Chinese adul animated feature “Have a Nice Day.” Its $11,000 initial Manhattan exclusive gross is the top limited release opener so far this year.
“Padmaavat” (Viva), a Bollywood historical epic which has caused controversy in its Indian release this week, managed to place in the overall Top Ten with a $4.3 million gross in only 324 theaters. In a limited run it managed to gross better than all but two of the lead category nominees playing this weekend.
“Tosca,” a Live at the Met single showing presentation in over 900 theaters, grossed $2 million. That’s a healthy boost and an example of how theaters are supplementing normal business with targeted audiences.
In a sign of the times, the first Sundance 2018 title has already debuted on Netflix though with little notice: Netflix’s National Lampoon early days biopic “A Futile and Stupid Gesture’ started showing on Friday while festival was still in progress.
Opening
Have a Nice Day (Strand) Metacritic: 81; Festivals include: Berlin, Seattle 2017
$(est.) 11,000 in 1 theater; PTA (per theater average): $(est.) 11,000
Not high on the radar in festival attention and not a factor in any awards race, this Chinese animated title was boosted by strong reviews which led to a good initial exclusive New York result. This crime drama (hardly typical of either animated content nor what Chinese censors usually allow) centers on a man who steals money from his boss to pay for his fiancee’s surgery in a remote city.
What comes next: Los Angeles opens Friday, with other cities (likely boosted by the initial performance) to follow.
International releases:
Padmaavat (Viva/India): $4,273,000 in 324 theaters
Also available on Video on Demand:
Please Stand By (Magnolia/Austin 2017): $(est.) 4,000 in 5 theaters

“Mary and the Witch’s Flower”
Week Two
Mary and the Witch’s Flower (Fathom)
$137,087 in 77 theaters (-84); PTA: $1,780; Cumulative: $1,786,000
Most of the gross for this Japanese animated release, which was overlooked for the Oscar, came for its Fathom special event one day showings two Thursdays ago. But those theaters who have continued playing added more to its already decent total.
A Ciambra (IFC)
$7,531 in 2 theaters (+1); PTA: $3,766; Cumulative: $17,405
This Italian foreign-language Oscar submission added Los Angeles. The drama centering on a young Roma teen headed for early adulthood continues to do minor business.

“Hostiles”
Ongoing/expanding (Grosses over $50,000)
Hostiles (Entertainment Studios) Week 6
$10,200,000 in 2,816 theaters (+2,697); Cumulative: $12,053,000
Though the strategy of a Christmas platform release and only minor added runs until the nominations didn’t pay off with a hoped for nod for Christian Bale, the early play and word of mouth did boost this western. Despite just slightly favorable reviews, Entertainment Studios’ marketing has propelled this into a decent national break, with a top three placement overall for the weekend despite major competition for older viewers. Its B Cinemascore doesn’t guarantee a big multiple ahead, but this Toronto acquisition looks like it could head to a respectable $30 million total. That’s much better than appeared possible with its mediocre initial results.
The Post (20th Century Fox) Week 6
$8,850,000 in 2,640 theaters (-211); Cumulative: $58,536,000
The 24 per cent drop likely is better than what normally would have occurred for the third wide weekend for Steven Spielberg’s film. Its two nominations were in top categories (Pictures and Actress) should guarantee an ultimate gross above the director’s last Oscar contender. “The Bridge of Spies” in 2015 grossed $72 million in a release in the fall before it got any boost from its award contention.

“The Shape of Water”
The Shape of Water (Fox Searchlight) Week 9
$5,700,000 in 1,854 theaters (+1,001); Cumulative: $37,679,000
The leading nominee jumped 161 per cent. The $5 million+ gross is better than any Best Picture winner has done after the nominations since “The King’s Speech” seven years ago (that smash had six weekend over that number), and a better weekend than any of them in its entire run since the fourth (in October) for “12 Years a Slave.” The film, even without a win in the category, looks headed for at least a $55 million total, likely more.
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (Fox Searchlight) Week 12
$3,600,000 in 1,457 theaters (+503); Cumulative: $37,011,000
A strong 88 per cent increase (helped by additional theaters) for this multiple nominee that looks like it will be Searchlight’s second $50 million+ grosser for the season.
I, Tonya (Neon) Week 8
$2,969,000 in 960 theaters (+18); Cumulative: $18,844,000
The second wide week for this retelling of the Tonya Hardy story fell 30 per cent after its multiple nominations. It still looks headed for somewhere around $30 million, which would put it ahead of films nominated in acting categories but not Best Picture.

“Phantom Thread”
Photo Courtesy of Focus Features
Phantom Thread (Focus) Week 5
$2,890,000 in 1,021 theaters (+125); Cumulative: $10,622,000
Paul Thomas Anderson’s film came out well in nominations, but still fell 11 per cent from last weekend. It still should end up grossing better than either of his two films since “There Will Be Blood,” with its international response (the roll out starts this week) to determine whether it has a shot at profit. (Its budget was $35 million).
Darkest Hour (Focus) Week 10
$2,885,000 in 1,333 theaters (-10); Cumulative: $45,197,000
With six nominations, this 1940 Winston Churchill wartime drama saw its grosses increase slightly despite its already lengthy run. This remains the leader among specialized company Best Picture nominees and now has taken over from “The Big Sick” among all specialized grossing 2017 titles (“The Space of Water” will likely overtake it).
Lady Bird (A24) Week 13
$1,925,000 in 1,177 theaters (+502); Cumulative: $41,648,000
Greta Gerwig’s comedy added Oscar acclaim to its accolades and rebounded once again to add to its already impressive total. It looks headed to $50 million depending on home viewing availability (the film is completing its third month in release).

“Call Me by Your Name”
Call Me By Your Name (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 10
$1,345,000 in 815 theaters (no change); Cumulative: $11,356,000
Though it received some top category nods (including Picture and Actor), this dropped 58 per cent from last weekend, which was its first wider break. This is not getting the response that other contenders have received from more mainstream audiences despite great acclaim. It still has a shot to hit somewhere close to $20 million if SPC can maintain screens for the next several weeks.
Molly’s Game (STX) Week 5
$900,000 in 556 theaters (-535); Cumulative: $25,900,000
After a decent run, Aaron Sorkin’s directorial debut, without either a Best Picture or Actress nomination, will soon finish its play.
The Disaster Artist (A24) Week 9
$104,108 in 84 theaters (-63); Cumulative: $20,916,000
Only a screenplay nomination for James Franco’s film means its successful run is coming to an end.
The Insult (Cohen) Week 3
$60,000 in 10 theaters (+7); Cumulative: $143,712
Capitalizing on its Foreign Language Film nod, Cohen added more cities for this Lebanese court drama with a better than average result for a subtitle expansion.
The Florida Project (A24) Week 17
$55,289 in 33 theaters (-4); Cumulative: $5,656,000
A supporting actor nomination for Willem Dafoe was the sole mention for Sean Baker’s much acclaimed film, now at about the end of its four-month run.
Also noted:
Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool (Sony Pictures Classics) – $35,918 in 19 theaters; Cumulative: $247,751
Happy End (Sony Pictures Classics) – $21,792 in 14 theaters; $198,481
Faces Places (Cohen) – $14,068 in 10 theaters; Cumulative: $722,829
Jane (Abramorama) – $12,221 in 9 theaters; Cumulative: $1,644,000
Source: IndieWire film
January 26, 2018
Ethical Design – 2018 SXSW Programming Trends
Each year, different trends emerge from SXSW programming and act as identifiers for where we’re at and where we’re headed. From the 12 significant trends identified by the SXSW Programming Team for the 2018 event, Ethical Design explores the social and psychological effects of our increased dependency on smart devices, and how these forces leave us vulnerable to the influence of product designers. Get to know this trend and related-SXSW sessions below that we think will dominate discussions this March.
Ethical Design Trend
Our current relationship with technology is close-knit and only growing closer as computing models advance to learning-based algorithms and tech companies shift their priority from hardware to software. We’re moving towards a post-device era, gradually abandoning the traditional shells that host mobile apps while designers evolve to provide device-independent services. With these changes, it’s crucial that designers keep technology in service of the people it is intended to serve.
Learn from cyber-psychologist Dr. Mary Aiken and Simon Segars, CEO of Arm, why it’s imperative that we develop a human-centered ethos around new technologies in the session Rebooting Tech for a Human-Centered Approach. Hear from Margaret Stewart, VP of Product Design at Facebook, on the importance of design ethics throughout her career designing at scale for Google, YouTube, and Facebook in the session Able, Allowed, Should: Navigating Design’s Complexity, and dive deeper into the design world in the session The Shadow Side of Human Centered Design focusing on what happens when designers fail to create for the whole human experience.
As technology accelerates at an exponential rate, it is essential we ask ourselves, what has happened to us since the dawn of the smartphone, social networking and mobile apps? And more importantly, what will happen to us if we fail to recognize the effects of our technology as we blindly trust designers to build products that integrate with nearly every aspect of our lives. The Ethical Design Trend at SXSW aims to answer these questions and is sure to leave attendees with perspectives challenged.
Stay tuned as we continue to announce more sessions through March. But for now, be sure to add these sessions to your 2018 SXSW Schedule.
Ethical Design Session Highlights
- Able, Allowed, Should: Navigating the Complexity of Modern Design Ethics
- Choice Architects: Design for Humanity’s Best Self
- The Designer’s Weakness, Understanding Power
- How Do We Ethically Manipulate 2b Minds
- The Shadow Side of Human Centered Design
Join Us for SXSW 2018
The SXSW Conference includes 24 programming tracks divided amongst Interactive, Film, Music, and Convergence. Each March, some of the world’s most creative minds come together in Austin, Texas to discover, learn, network, brainstorm and collaborate.
Explore new opportunities during 10 days of sessions, screenings, showcases, exhibitions, networking, and beyond from March 9-18 at SXSW 2018. Save big when you register to attend before Friday, February 9.
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Teaser Photo by Sara Marjorie Strick
The post Ethical Design – 2018 SXSW Programming Trends appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film
January 26, 2018
Watch: How ‘Dunkirk’ Uses a Classic Audio Illusion to Ratchet Up the Tension
The auditory phenomenon known as the Shepard tone is used to add suspense to <i>Dunkirk</i>.<p>When filmmakers use every cinematic element at their disposal, …
Source: CW’s Flipboard Feed
January 25, 2018
25 Years of SXSW Film Festival – Aaron Katz, Kris Swanberg, Jim Cummings, and Jody Lee Lipes
To commemorate the 25th edition of the SXSW Film Festival, we continue our weekly alumni spotlight on careers launched, artists discovered, powerful performances, and more with Aaron Katz, Kris Swanberg, Jim Cummings, and Jody Lee Lipes.
Aaron Katz
Katz has world premiered four films at SXSW including his debut feature Dance Party USA in 2006, Quiet City in 2007, Cold Weather in 2012, and most recently the thriller Gemini in 2017, distributed by Neon and starring John Cho, Zoe Kravitz, Lola Kirke, and Ricki Lake. In 2014 he co-wrote and directed the adventure-comedy, Land Ho with SXSW alum Martha Stephens.
“In 2005, after working on my first movie for almost two years, I had no idea what to do with it. I submitted it to SXSW, not knowing anything except that it was one of the few festivals I had heard of. Much to my surprise, I got a call one day and learned that my movie had been accepted into competition. That first chance to show my movie and meet other filmmakers gave me the confidence that a life and career in film was possible.”
Kris Swanberg
Swanberg’s directorial debut It Was Great, But I Was Ready to Come Home premiered at SXSW in 2009 in the narrative feature competition. Her short Baby Mary premiered in the Narrative Shorts Program in 2014 and Swanberg’s second feature, Unexpected screened in Festival Favorites in 2015 after its Sundance premiere. In addition to her work as a filmmaker, Swanberg has acted in many SXSW alumni films including Joe Swanberg‘s Kissing On the Mouth (2005), Hannah Takes the Stairs (2007), and Win It All (2017). She also acted in It Was Great, But I Was Ready to Come Home.
“SXSW changed my life by taking a chance on my early work and giving me constant encouragement as a growing filmmaker.”
Jim Cummings
Cummings has produced three world premieres at SXSW including Euphonia (2013), Confusion Through Sand (2014), and The Grief of Others (2015). Cummings received a Special Jury Recognition for Acting in Thunder Road at SXSW 2016, a film which he also directed, wrote, and edited. His next short, The Robbery screened at the festival in 2017. He is currently working on the feature adaptation of Thunder Road.
“SXSW changed my life by showcasing the most culturally significant artwork on the planet, which gave me an understanding of what was possible by making movies on your own. I love SXSW because I get to fall in love with movies and meet the wonderful people who make them. SXSW was the first festival that treated me like a filmmaker. It is the reason I’m still making movies.”
Jody Lee Lipes
Lipes is a director and cinematographer. At SXSW 2009 he was here for his first film as director, Brock Enright: Good Times Will Never Be the Same and as a director of photography for Antonio Campus’s After School. In 2010, he world premiered his next feature, NY Export: Opus Jazz, which earned the Audience Award for Emerging Visions. He’s shot a number of other SXSW selections like The Great Invisible (2014), the jury award- winning Tiny Furniture (2010) and Girls (2012) to name a few. Recently, Lipes shot the Academy-Award winning drama Manchester by the Sea and the pilot for the new USA series The Sinner, in addition to directing an episode.
“I love SXSW because they were the first festival that embraced me as a director, by selecting my first feature length documentary to be a part of their program almost ten years ago. That honor inspired me to continue making my own work. It’s always been the most fun festival in the world, going there is a joy rather than an obligation.”
Join Us For SXSW 2018
Grab your Film Badge today for primary access to all SXSW Film events including world premieres, roundtables, workshops, and parties. Register to attend by Friday, February 9 and save. Book your hotel through SXSW Housing & Travel for the best available rates.
Stay tuned for the 2018 SXSW Film Festival lineup which will be announced in January.
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World Premiere of Gemini – Photo by Amy E. Price/Getty Images for SXSW
Kris Swanberg – Photo by Chris Saucedo
Jim Cummings – Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for SXSW
Jody Lee Lipes – Photo by Nita Rios
The post 25 Years of SXSW Film Festival – Aaron Katz, Kris Swanberg, Jim Cummings, and Jody Lee Lipes appeared first on SXSW.
Source: SxSW Film