Producer to Producer – Maureen Ryan

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Producer to Producer – Maureen Ryan

I’ve been making my way through Producer to Producer (from the indispensable house of Michael Wiese Books) by Maureen Ryan (Man on Wire, Project Nim, many more) and while the book won’t receive any accolades for its prose, if you’re looking for a no nonsense, nuts-and-bolts tome on producing, this is an excellent resource and well worth the cover price. The Amazon.com reviews go into much more detail than I’m inclined to here but, suffice to say, with this book in hand, a producer can helm any range of production(s), from a micro-budget “local” short up...

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IFW 2009 – Panel, “From Doc to Series & Beyond, Opportunities in Non-Fiction”

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Overview: http://ifw.bside.com/2009/films/fromdoctoseriesbeyond_ifw2009 After a subdued conference this was the one panel with good news. Although the success of reality TV/documentary programming has cannibalized other segments of the market, non-fiction broadcast is alive, thriving, and looking for content. But for a documentarian looking to make the jump to network programming, the panel advised that some pre-conceptions about the craft of documentary filmmaking and what it means to be a documentarian need to be set aside. To wit: you’ve got to deliver. On time, on schedule, within...

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IFW 2009 – Panel, “Fresh Funding, Modern Ideas for Doc Financing”

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Overview: http://ifw.bside.com/2009/films/freshfundingmodernideasfordocfinancing_ifw2009;jsessionid=50B709A02CE6EC14E2ECD31C089890CB The title of this panel is a bit misleading, because, unless you’re one of a handful of documentarians around the globe, there really *isn’t* a lot of money. But the panelists offered some great advice, and there’s no reason why a smart, driven, and savvy documentarian shouldn’t be able to support herself comfortably. Only raised a small amount of money? No sweat, you’re not doing anything wrong. That’s how it goes...

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IFW 2009 – Panel, “Unlocking Global Financing Opportunities”

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Overview: http://ifw.bside.com/2009/films/unlockingglobalfinancingopportunities_ifw2009;jsessionid=50B709A02CE6EC14E2ECD31C089890CB The panel pointed out something that we often forget, the indie film industry is still relatively young. Depending on how you define the “start” of it as an industry (and that term should be used loosely), perhaps the late 60s to mid 70s, it’s somewhere around 40 years old. And financing deals didn’t come to play in it considerably until the mid- to late-80s or so–about 20 years ago. Initially, LLCs were the first way of funding...

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UFC meets IFP – Panelists Gone Wild! Independent Filmmaker Week 2009 – Panel, “The Next Wave of Distribution”

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Overview: http://ifw.bside.com/2009/films/casestudyyourfilmonline_ifw2009 Full disclosure, if you’re looking for bikini-clad babes cat-fighting to the death or someone taking it in the crotch, keep moving. But this was the most bickersome of the panels, and everyone loves conflict; especially amongst film geeks. (The only thing more exciting is a backyard book club brawl.) Moderated, just barely, by Eugene Hernandez of IndieWire, “traditional” film models and distribution–as represented by Jake Abraham and Hernandez–clashed head-on with a very opinionated (and...

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Independent Filmmaker Week 2009 – Panel, “Your Film Online (Case Study: Sally Potter’s ‘Rage’)”

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Overview http://ifw.bside.com/2009/films/casestudydigitalfilmmakingfeaturingentrenos_ifw2009 At first I was planning on grabbing a gyro for this panel, like many cineastes, the idea of exhibition on a cell phone doesn’t appeal to me. However, since this panel was part of “Filmmaking 2.0″ (the unifying theme of the panels on Monday), I decided to embrace the spirit of the day, stable my persnickety tendencies, and give it a go. I’m glad I did. First off: this is an interesting experiment with A-list talent touted as the first “major feature” released...

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