Posts Tagged ‘shorts’

FirstGlance Hollywood 10 (4 week PR)

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

FirstGlance Film Fest 10 Hollywood Announces its Lineup Features 18 Premieres out of 30 Projects

Hollywood, CA, March 12, 2010 – The 10th annual FirstGlance Film Fest Hollywood opens on Friday,April 9th and runs though Sunday, April 11th, 2010 at Raleigh Studios Chaplin Theater, 5300 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, CA.  This independent, bi-coastal festival showcases award winning features, short narratives, documentaries and mini-docs, animation, music videos and student shorts from all genres.

With an online shorts contest, FirstGlance also brings indie shorts to audiences at home. Register for the contest in late March and vote online for 6 weeks at www.firstglancefilms.com. The winning short screens at FirstGlance Philadelphia and James Caan will view and review it.

The festival kicks off Friday, April 9th when doors open at 7:30 p.m. for the 8:00 p.m. screening of:

LIZARD – World Premiere

SMALL COLLECTION

THE LIFTER UPPER – World Premiere
2095

ONCE FALLEN – World Premiere starring Taraji P Henson, Ed Harris, Amy Madigan, and Peter Weller

The Saturday, April 10th Matinee Screening at 3:30 p.m. features:

THE EXTRAORDINARY MONDAY OF HERMAN BRUMBY – World Premiere PEACEFUL MEASURES – Hollywood Premiere
SHOOTING BEAUTY

The Saturday, April 10th Twilight Screening at 5:30 p.m. features:

LIGHTHEADED
ARTOIS THE GOAT – Hollywood Premiere

The Saturday, April 10th Prime Time Screening at 8:00 p.m. features:

THINK TANK “ARCADIA” – World Premiere
CROSSING THE LINE – Hollywood Premiere starring Anne Ramsay and James Eckhouse
LEFT UNSPOKEN
HECTOR CORP – Hollywood Premiere
METH – World Premiere
IN MY POCKET – World Premiere starring Gregory  Smith,  Brendan Sexton III, Shantel VanSanten, Kaylee DeFer, and Zack Ward

The Sunday, April 11th Matinee Screening at 3:30 p.m. features:

UNDER GOD – World Premiere
HEAD IN THE SAND – World Premiere
AS EVER, STAN
HALF KENNETH
BRUSHES WITH LIFE – World Premiere

The Sunday, April 11th Twilight Screening at 5:30 features:

SKYLIGHT
RUN! – World Premiere
FLAT LOVE – Hollywood Premiere starring Isabella Rossellini
ABUELO – FirstGlance Philadelphia’s Best of the Fest Winner
DREAMS – World Premiere

The Sunday, April 11th Closing Night Screening at 8:00 p.m. features:

THE GOD MOTHER

ALIENATED – World Premiere starring Vincent Pastore

CHARLIE VALENTINE starring Raymond J Berry, Michael Weatherly, James Russo,and Tom Berenger

“Filmmakers and audiences enjoy our festival because FirstGlance brings a number of indie premieres to the screen, audiences vote for the “Best of the Fest” creating a fun, competitive environment at each screening plus instant audience feedback for the filmmakers, and there are after parties ideal for Q & As and networking,” said Bill Ostroff, Festival Director.

Tickets on sale NOW at http://www.firstglancefilms.com/hollywood/schedule.

Matinee Screenings $8.00
First Night and Closing Night Screening $12.00
All Other Screenings $10.00
All Access Pass $50.00

Complete screening schedule available at http://firstglancefilms.com/hollywood/schedule.

Watch trailers for FirstGlance Hollywood 10 films at http://firstglancefilms.com/hollywood/trailers.

FirstGlance Films’ year round activities include: FirstGlance Film Fest Philadelphia and Hollywood, Feature & Short Screenplay Competitions, On-line Film Competition, Show Us Your Shorts Screenings, OctoberfestPhilly, and Short Film Productions.  In 2007, MOVIEMAKER Magazine named FirstGlance as “One of 40 Most Indie Friendly Businesses” and “One of 20 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee,” and in 2006, TIME Magazine named FirstGlance “One of the Top 10 Festivals for the Rest of Us.”

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Co-sponsored by Sony Software, Baseline Studio Systems, Glidecam, Showbiz Software, Gorilla Software, ReelLogix Software, Final Draft, Twisted Tracks, Moviemaker Magazine, Frame Forge 3D, Movies Unlimited, CMM Productions, ProductionHub, InkTip, Indiepix, Withoutabox, and the Greater Philadelphia Film Office.

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FirstGlance Film Fest Philadelphia Opens for submissions!

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

FIRSTGLANCE FILM FEST PHILADELPHIA 2010

CALL FOR ENTRIES

OPENS February 13 2010


Early Deadline March 13 2010
Regular Deadline April 13 2010
Late Deadline May 13 2010
WAB Extended Deadline June 1 2010

Event Scheduled for October 14 –17 2010
The Franklin Institute


FirstGlance is Philadelphia’s Independent Film Festival since 1996!


Our 13th annual FirstGlance Film Fest Philly is open to professional, first time, graduate and undergraduate filmmakers from down the street and across the globe. FirstGlance showcases the best indie filmmaking from around the world and celebrates Philadelphia filmmakers with a festival described as, “one of the most entertaining festivals out there” and “Philadelphia’s answer to Sundance”

In our continuing effort to bring additional opportunities and audiences to filmmakers we have partnered with The Franklin Institute to launch the first ever KidFest Philly to our October event. KidFest is open to child and family friendly shorts, animation and feature length narrative and documentaries. The chosen films will be offered special screenings at the museum.

Selected FirstGlance Official Selections will be invited to premiere at the Bram Stoker Film Festival in the UK in 2011. Bram Stoker is one of Europe’s premiere horror, sci-fi, thriller festivals.

All Official Selections are eligible for our revenue share, no-cost, non-exclusive online distribution with iPod compatible and streaming rental downloads. (link to download page).

Named, “one of the best film festival investments” and “One of the top 40 indie film friendly businesses in the world”. FirstGlance continues to champion indie filmmakers from around the world, making FirstGlance Film Fest, the longest running and most notable independent film fest in Philadelphia!!

ALL OFFICIAL SELECTIONS receive an awards package
valued at over $200.00 USD (including All Access Passes)

All GENRES ACCEPTED
Feature Length (over 60 min.)
Feature Documentary (over 60 min.)
Short Narrative (under 30 min.)
Shorts Too (under 10 min)
Mini-Docs (under 30 min.)
Student Shorts (under 20min.)
Graduate Student Shorts (under 20min)
Music Videos (under 5 min)
Animation (under 30 min)
International Shorts (under 30 min)
International Shorts Too (under 10min)
Webisode Pilots (under 10 min)

*NEW Categories*
KidFest Shorts (under 30 min)
KidFest Animation (under 30 min)
KidFest Features (over 60 min)


SHOT IN PHILLY celebrates the best in filmmaking by Philadelphia filmmakers.

FirstGlance awards over 50,000 in cash, prizes and giveaways yearly

In 2010, we continue our sliding scale cash prizes, for every 1000 entries we receive, $5000.00 in USD CASH will be awarded to the Grand Prize BEST OF THE FEST winner and for every category that receives 200 entries or more, $1,000 in Cash will be awarded to the highest rated film in that category!

FirstGlance Sponsors and Prizes

Entry Fee:
Starting at $25.00 for early submissions. Entries must be submitted on NTSC Region 0 or 1 DVD.

Online entry through Withoutabox beginning Feb 13, 2010


In keeping with our GREEN initiative, we ask that you submit electronically and fill out your application online. Please request a paper application, if needed HERE

(Prizes subject to change and festival discretion, not all winners receive all listed prizes. Above information/dates are subject to change)
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What is KidFest!

Monday, January 18th, 2010

KidFest will be the first of its kind in Philadelphia this year!

Kid Fest will run throughout October and in conjunction with FirstGlance Film Fest Philly TwentyTen on October 14-17 2010.

Our new relationship with The Franklin Institute and the newly remodeled Franklin Theater, which we had the pleasure of screening in last year, has graciously agreed to a proposed idea to the marketing dept to assist them in getting new audiences into the theater during museum hours.

Since the venue is considered a family museum and people travel from across the US and world to come to The Franklin Institute, our normal festival fare is not always fitting, as those of you that have taken part, either as audience or filmmakers are aware. So we decided to open new categories for kid and family friendly films and animation for the first time in our 13 year history.

The venue has agreed to show the films we choose from the entries  during museum hours throughout the month of October and market to there many hundred thousands of members.

We believe this is an amazing opportunity to give filmmakers who create family friendly films, both short and features the visibility from audiences you wouldn’t normally find at FirstGlance Film Fest Philly or at most film festivals around the country!

We are excited about the possibility of becoming a potential curator of truly indie films and locally produced films. With the ability to schedule special screenings and  offer opportunities for truly indie filmmakers to screen in a beautiful theater in the heart of Center City Philly. We look forward to creating a go to venue for indies in Philadelphia, without having to fourwall a major theater chain!

FirstGlance Film Fest Philly TwentyTen

Submit your film HERE!

We look forward to an amazing year in Philly.

Thank you for your continuing support of truly indie films and FirstGlance Philadelphia’s Independent Film Festival since 1996

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Getting your Indie film ready! (PART ONE)

Friday, January 8th, 2010

As Stephen Colbert might say “this is part one in a neverending series on…”

Marketing and promoting your film to audiences

In speaking with many filmmakers, marketing and publicity professionals and others who have already taken their films through the festival circuit and are now distributing, it is important to have a marketing plan before you embark on your short or feature film.

We have decided to add resources to our website and that includes pointers to get the most out of your festival run as well as learning how to grassroots market your film and create the audience you need to sustain your film once it gets to the distribution market in whatever form or format.

To begin your journey, once you have a name for your film, buy the URL or something close to it from a site like GoDaddy, which offers cheap registration, hosting, website creation, email marketing etc.

Find someone to create a nice looking clean website or do it yourself. It doesn’t have to be flashy, or have the latest technologies, but it should have a hook, whether it be a tagline, or pictures or a logo for your film or film company. If the page is only a placeholder until you get more assets, be sure to include somewhere that visitors can join the site, so you can start collecting emails.

While creating your website, you should  start a Facebook Fan Page, a Twitter and Youtube account. Take advantage of some of the largest sites on the web to drive interest and traffic to your brand(film).

Invite the friends you already have and begin the “Snowball” effect! You can then link your facebook updates to Twitter and you can start building followers. The more active you are on these sites the more will follow and be sure to link up to groups and individuals on these sites with similar interests.

Once you start shooting, Youtube is great for onset videos, trailers, teases and other video assets to create a buzz, you can link your Youtube videos to Facebook and tweet them to your followers.

When you are in production, be sure to have someone take production stills, behind the scenes (EPK) video, even take those little USB video cameras and shoot a couple little vignettes from set and upload them. Do anything you can to create an interactive aspect for your film. The more you involve your followers, users, the more they will look forward to seeing your completed film.

As you build your brand, you should keep your website up to date, add Twitter, Facebook, Youtube links, if you enjoy writing from set, or taking photos on set, put them up, or blog on your site! Keep it active and updated often!

Actors are a great marketing tool as well!! The actors in your film are just as excited about seeing the final product…most of them will also tweet, facebook and youtube about the project, and never forget to invite them to any festival screenings. I have spoken with actors who had never known that a film they were in played at a festival, until after the event.

The great thing about a collaborative effort is that everyone involved wants to see it through and cast and crew should not be forgotten as some of them may already have a huge following, especially if you are using SAG or AFTRA actors.

Before you launch your films festival journey, be sure to have a strong trailer, great Key Art, and production stills and a short synopses with major cast. Most festivals are fine with digital assets, so no need to send out lots of paper.

Think about ancillary markets…Create T-shirts, posters, postcards, if your film has a genre specific theme, you may be able to create other promotional items.

Once you embark on your festival journey, start thinking about distribution. A feature film has a better chance of distribution. However some festivals offer shorts distribution, be careful not to end up in a clearinghouse, which basically collects films and never really distributes them to the public.

We are aware filmmakers tend to be wary of distribution deals, as many have been burned before and are gunshy, but if you feel you have a great product you may want to make it available during the festival run, as a download, so when audience comes out of the screening and ask you how they can get your film, you don’t have to spend money bringing DVD’s, creating artwork, lugging them from city to city. If they can download it on there computer or Ipod, or Iphone, you are already making money back!

Find what’s right for you, as many distribution models are no-cost, revenue share with non-exclusive deals. Think of it as a vanity press for your personal use, it’s not truly distribution, and most film festivals don’t really care if your film is available online, this is mostly true for short content. Feature film is another story. Very few features will ever see there money back when going through a middleman, maybe you want to DIY!!

From our experiences, we know many filmmakers are not marketers, and we also think investing the time  creating it yourself or hiring a indie film marketing pro could be a good thing to get audiences to your screening and visibility for your film.

Be aware, marketing is a time intensive process and not a one day thing, build a good following from the beginning and they become invested in you. You don’t necessarily need to hire anyone to market, but if you have the extra money or can get a free consultation with one, it’s not a bad idea to pick the brain of a professional, or someone who’s been through the process and come out successful on the other side!

This is part one of an on-going series, how many, who knows…

Please feel free to comment and add suggestions We want this to be as thorough and informative as possible.

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What Indie Filmmakers Want!

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

As 2009 comes to a close and we look forward to the convergence of technologies and platforms making it easier and more efficient for TRUE indie filmmakers to distribute, we are curious to find out what indie filmmakers want!

Features, shorts, documentaries, animation…Can filmmakers find the resources online to successfully distribute their film and make enough money to embark on there next project?

Is it more visibility, more distribution opportunities, better platforms to screen their films? More reliable technologies? Is it more control on revenues, more genre specific sites that showcase quality shorts?

You tell us and we’ll put together an unbiased list of the needs and resources for the indie filmmaker…

If you have a success story we want to know, too!

Thank you and have a great 2010!!

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FirstGlance Film Fest Philly 12 Announces Winners

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Well what a weekend it was screening more than 30 award winning films!

FirstGlance Film Fest Philly 12 has come to a close and we were so happy that more than half of the directors from the official selections came out to the festival this year.  It was so nice to meet all of them and talk to them about why they made their films and what they hope to accomplish with them.  The venue was spectacular, the projection system amazing and the crowds large and enthusiastic.  Thanks to all of the filmmakers and all who attended!  FirstGlance would not be possible without all of you.

At each screening, FirstGlance announced which award each film received from the festival and here is the list.  In the coming weeks we will announce the BEST OF THE FEST and the highest scoring audience voted films in each category so be sure to check back.

FEATURES

Chasing the White Dragon – Kathilynn Phillips

Best Drama

Friends (with Benefits) – Gorman Bechard

Best Ensemble Cast

How I Got Lost – Joe Leonard

Best Director

Dark Room Theater Double Feature- Benjamin Pollack

Best Comedy

FEATURE DOCS

Smile ‘Til It Hurts – Lee Storey

Best Director

Butterflies- Ester Brym

Best Entertainment Documentary

The Color Bearers – John Foley

Best Historical Documentary

SHORTS

Peter Arthur – James Bartolmeo

Best Director

The Beneficiary – Theodore Melfi

Best Actress-Julie Ann Emory

Death In Charge – Devi Snively

Best Horror

In the Dark- Alex Fazeli

Best Cinematography

Eiko – Christoph Kusching

Best International Short

Peace of Mind – Nathan Crooker

Best Actor –Matt Newton

Ergotism – Stefan Rochfort

Best Comedy

Holy Water – Tatiana Lamela-Rabell

Best Editing

Abuelo – Mary Ann Kellogg

Best Breakthrough Performance- Britt Flatmo

Lady Feet- Christopher Toppino

Best Drama

In Search of Aztec Gold – Nardeep Khurmi

Best Local Short

SHORTS TOO

Crossing the Line – Martha Elcan

Best Drama

True Beauty This Night – Peter Besson

Best Director

Tripping Up – Greg Koorhan

Best Comedy

MINI DOCS

Free The River Park – Tara Nurin and Rob Stuart

Best Director

Friends of Independence – Joe Medeiros

Best Editing

STUDENT SHORTS

Melancholamorbus – Ryan O’ Laughlin

Best Director

Martin – Sean Branigan

Best Drama

ANIMATION

American Terror: Company Man- Joseph Krzemienski

Best Drama

Skylight- David Baas

Best Director

Duke Baa – Shu-Han Yang

Best 3d Animation

Un Duelo- Felipe Esquival

Best International Animation

Autonomy – Brad Regier

Best Comedy

MUSIC VIDEO

Visa “Breakout the Violins” – Tadeh Daschi

Best Production Design

Annakin “Alive” – Christian Ammann

Best Cinematography

One Word Song “Time Stood Still” – Rodrigo Orozco

Best Editing

DelMar “Until the Sun” – Brandon Nguyen

Best Director

Short Online Contest Winner

Growing Up Vegas- Amber Beard

Best Online Short

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FirstGlance Film Fest 12 Philadelphia Announces Schedule!

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

We are excited to announce that we will be showing over 30 award winning films at FirstGlance Film Fest 12 Philadelphia on October 22-25th 2009!

Check out the schedule and create your own watchlist so you don’t miss a thing!

Also beginning Sept 22nd, we will offer the opportunity to take part in our 3rd Short Online Contest. You can register, watch and vote for your favorite short film online and help decide which short goes on to win over $2500.00 in prizes and a screening in the closing night program at FirstGlance Philly!

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