View allAll Photos Tagged FilmMaking
iPhone pic: The unglamorous side of wildlife filmmaking! Miles of receipts to painfully pick through on an expenses marathon :-(
Article is from a reputed blog
1. A Film Is A Director’s Vision
It is common for a director and actor to have issues with each other. According to Subhash Ghai,”actors and directors have always been enemies. This has been the case for more than 100 years now. But ironically, they are ...
cinemababu.com/farhan-akthar-s-master-class-article-on-fi...
What does yoga have to do with filmmaking?? Connecting the mind to the body definitely plays out quality of work you make. Filmmakers, often locked away in dark rooms editing, need to take the time to take care of themselves.
Wow nice techniques on communication with your crew on sets, how scripts are important to movie,how analyzing time for every take in pre production
Al Caraballo hosted an introduction to the business and creative aspects of movie making for beginner and intermediate filmmakers.
Photo by Bill Delano.
Audience members learn best practices at a "Nonprofit Storytelling Filmmaking Workshop," scheduled as part of the first annual Benevolent Media Festival in Washington, D.C.
www.benevolentmedia.org/2011/11/16/making-soup-with-stone...
EVENT DESCRIPTION:
Monday November 7, 2011 10:30am - 12:00pm @ World Resources Institute
Sponsored by Stone Soup Films, a nonprofit film cooperative based in DC, this workshop is a practical look at communications challenges many nonprofits face and how a film can help move the ball forward. This is a hands-on exercise, with real-life scenarios and examples. The workshop will be held at the World Resources Institute, a global environmental think tank.
About the Speaker:
Director/Founder, Stone Soup Films Liz Norton was a freelance television producer for over ten years, with a focus on public policy issues. Those programs included several Fred Friendly Seminars for PBS, which explore thorny political and ethical issues in depth and she has also produced for MTV News, educating teens on crime-related issues such as gun control. During the Clinton Administration, Liz was a research director in the White House Office of Communications. In that role, she served as a link between the president, the press and the public, primarily on the issues involving crime and drug policy. Before then she was a researcher on political campaign finances for Common Cause, a non-partisan lobbying organization. For twenty years Liz has been a director of the Diane and Norman Bernstein Foundation in Washington DC. She founded Stone Soup Films in early 2008.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
In Search of a Vision Behind the Camera?
5-DAY INTENSIVE DIGITAL FILMMAKING WORKSHOP Nov. 9-13
LEARN, SHOOT and NETWORK!
Pattera: Midwives of Guam is a video documentary by Karen A. Cruz made in 2001.
Karen Cruz/Guam Humanities Council
Tasha Cohan ’11 and Nikki Heyman ’12 talk to current Oberlin students about how they have manage their careers as independent filmmakers since graduation.
Cohan and Heyman's visit was sponsored by the Alumni Association's Alumni in Service to Oberlin College (ASOC) program. ASOC was established four decades ago to help departments, programs, and student groups bring alumni back to campus to lecture and meet with current students and other members of the community.
Photo by Chris Schmucki '22
I'm working my first gig as an extra on the "A Team Movie" that's filming an hour from my home. The location we're at is very desert-like and is being used to simulate Mexico. The dirt on the site is as fine as talcum powder and when the wind blows, everything gains a thick layer of dust, which the other crew members find annoying because they have to keep their iPods, BlackBerrys and cell phones put away so that the fine dust doesn't find its way into their devices. With my OtterBox Armor, I don't have to worry about it at all. While I'm waiting off set, I can use my iPod touch through the fully functional protective window. I slipped the OtterBox onto my police belt before they took the continuity shots, so now I have to wear it through the whole shoot, for continuity's sake, which is great because I have fast access to my music between shots! After the day of shooting was done, I ran into Quinton "Rampage" Jackson, one of the top 5 UFC fighters, who is playing Mr. T's role of B.A.Baracus. "Rampage" who is known for his wrestling, strength and slamming ability rose to the challenge and put my OtterBox in his signature move, the Power Bomb! He gave it all his might but the iPod survived!!! I picked it up and the iPod started up, no worries*. Thanks OtterBox!!!* The last paragraph may not have actually happened and may have been added for dramatic effect. - Brad
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
Al Caraballo hosted an introduction to the business and creative aspects of movie making for beginner and intermediate filmmakers.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
Image Courtesy: Isaac (www.flickr.com/photos/isaacapphotography/6495505165), Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic | Flickr
Holy Hell!!!
From: jeff - saddle creek records
Date: June 28, 2005 18:02:58 MDT
To: Jason Nolan (My producer)
Subject: Re: Bright Eyes - Rights for short Canadian film
Hey Jason, (my producer)
I just got approval from Bright Eyes. Do you have an agreement
written up?
Thanks
Jeff
I'm so excited!!! Please, just don't tell Conor I'm such a wanker....
*And Conor wants a DVD copy upon completion! Uber rad!
Testing out the AtomOS Samurai Blade on my Canon C300, and Azul was the somewhat willing subject.
Not color graded. And I screwed up while shooting this; Blade was on the wrong frame rate. This was actually because it wasn't seeing the 24 frame rate out of the camera. Weird. Working fine now.