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January 20, 2009  |  A Penton Media Publication  |     SUBSCRIBE   |   UNSUBSCRIBE   |   PREFERENCES   


Your Work. A BIG Industry Stage. Make Your Impression.
Have your demo reel and project work shown on a 35 ft. movie screen at broadcasting and film’s biggest trade event--the 2009 NAB Show. Four REEL IMPRESSIONS showcases (Cinematography, Editing/Visual Effects, Animation, and Student Work) will be projected HD in a 300 seat theater right inside the Las Vegas Convention Center. Your name in lights--thousands of attendees. Entry Deadline: Feb 27, 2008. Enter Now!
For more information visit digitalcontentproducer.com/reel-impressions or email support@reel-exchange.com.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
From the Blog
Exclusive Podcasts

From the Blog
Leitner’s Mondo 2009 Sundance, Monday
By David Leitner

Yesterday I touched upon some of the reasons the air has been let out of Sundance’s balloon this year. And ballooned it has in the past decade. Today I’m thinking that this year’s soft attendance is a gift, an omen that Sundance needs to reinvent itself. Or at least step back and recalibrate.

After all, 25 years ago American independent films were 16mm, low-budget, and all but locked out of the box office. While chances of theatrical success remain as remote today as ever—admittedly there have been giant strides for documentary, Michael Moore’s body of work for example, or those penguins—digital technology with its protean reach, low entry cost and endlessly rising quality has leveled the playing field as far as production goes. more>>

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Streaming for Video Pros: Producing streaming video with Final Cut Pro and Compressor
Apple Final Cut Studio is an outstanding video editor, and Compressor is highly capable, but inter-program workflows can be confusing to say the least. For example, which of the program’s de-interlacing settings (there are at least three between Final Cut Pro and Compressor) produces the best quality? Register for the webcast, to be held Jan. 28 at 2 p.m. EST.


New New Frontier
dscn1691.JPGBy Cynthia Wisehart

I started going to New Frontier on Main before it was called that, when it was just a warm, dark basement full of chilly festivalgoers and digital cameras and editing software. There were some classes, panel discussions, and no cell phone reception unless you went out the door and into the mall atrium (which now has signage announcing it as the “Cell Phone Atrium”). Inside, it’s slicked up too—veering away from any trade show booth vibe and towards nightclub/art installation. One of the first big developments was to bring in the online shorts a few years ago; one of the most fun ways to warm up is to sit at one of the computers in the moody lighting and browse the shorts. From there you can move on to the video art installations, check out the irresistable "Artists and Scientists" segments, play with the "editing gloves", and then choose from the Microcinema panels; some from Sony, Avid, and Panavision on technie stuff, plus issues-based panels with a timely focus on distribution. Oh, and you can see the entire Sony XDCAM lineup in one place. more>>

2009 Short Film Patrol: Instead of Abracadabra
abra.jpgBy Eric Melin

Swedish writer/director Patrik Eklund recently cut a show reel for a local magician and ended up with four hours of footage of the hapless man and (more importantly) an idea for a new short film. The result is Instead of Abracadabra, a very funny and sweet 22-minute short about a twentysomething slacker who lives with his parents and dreams of being a magician.

The trick up Eklund’s sleeve is recognizing that very important moment of suspense right before the magician plunges the sword into the box containing his volunteer. If a magician is truly awful, that person in the box really should be scared for their life. Since Tomas (Simon Berger) has already sent his mother to the hospital doing the same trick, the audience now knows that anything can happen. more>>

Exclusive Podcasts
Arlen Faber Director John Hindman
arlenfaber_hindman.JPGJohn Hindman didn't have to go the normal route of getting funding for his independent film before the acquiring the cast. Actor Jeff Daniels signed on to play the title charatcer, Arlen Faber, after reading Hindman's script and before the money was even there. "If it weren't for Jeff taking a chance on me, a nobody, I would just be a guy who wrote a screenplay," he says. Arlen Faber is the story of a reclusive writer who surfaces on the 20th anniversary his best-selling religious self-help book, and is competing in the dramatic competetion at Sundance this year. It also co-stars Lauren Graham, Olivia Thirlby, and Kat Dennings. more>>

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