Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves in the world. It was once so rich that Concorde used to fly from Caracas to Paris. But in the last three years its economy has collapsed. Hunger has gripped the nation for years. Now, it’s killing people and animals that are dying of starvation. The Venezuelan government knows, but won’t admit it!!! Four in five Venezuelans live in poverty. People queue for hours to buy food. Much of the time they go without. People are also dying from a lack of medicines. Inflation is at 82,766% and there are warnings it could exceed one million per cent by the end of this year. Venezuelans are trying to get out. The UN says 2.3 million people have fled the country - 7% of the population.
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Documentary. Show all posts

Monday, October 15, 2012

Michael Moore's New Plan: Eliminate the Oscar Documentary Rules


Michael Moore's New Plan: Eliminate the Oscar Documentary Rules

Published: October 14, 2012 @ 6:41 pm






Michael Moore has taken another look at the Academy's notoriously messy documentary process, and he has a new proposal:
The way to fix the documentary rules is to eliminate the documentary rules.
Todd Wawrychuk/AMPAS
Instead of making additional tweaks in an often-changed system that this year has overwhelmed voters with a glut of fourth-quarter screeners, Moore has decided that the best approach is to stop worrying about qualifying runs, reviews or TV movies vs. theatrical docs.


"Instead of making one fix after another, how about no rules?" said Moore on Sunday, adding that he was revealing his plans for the new proposal for the first time to TheWrap. It was just last year, following a push led by Moore, that the Academy reworked its rules surrounding documentaries.
"What I'm going to propose is that instead of going back to the drawing board and making up new rules, let's just put an end to that right now. No more special documentary rules. How about we play by the same rules as every other branch?"
The approach, he said, would mean that documentaries would qualify for the Oscars under the same standards that other films are subject to – standards that are less restrictive than the doc-branch regulations.  (For one thing, they require only a one-week run in Los Angeles County, not one in L.A. and one in New York.)
"We should abide by the rules that every other branch has to abide by," he said. "And we should leave it up to the Academy staff to decide if films qualify, the same way they decide for every fiction film."
The Oscar-winning director doesn't foresee any alteration to the main change that was made when the new rules were instituted earlier this year; that change was the elimination of small screening committees that created the 15-film shortlist.
The elimination of those committees, he said, has been unanimously embraced by the branch and will continue in the future, as will the Academy's decision to foot the cost of preparing and sending screeners of every eligible documentary to all branch members.
But Moore said he has also talked to Academy CEO and COO Dawn Hudson and Ric Robertson, to his fellow Documentary Branch governors and to some New York-based members, and gotten support for eliminating all special documentary rules and saying that any film that meets the overall Academy qualifying criteria will also be eligible in the Best Documentary Feature category. 
"The response to this has been very good," said Moore. "I think the counter-intuitive nature of it might actually be the solution. And everybody loved the idea of not having to read any more articles about the documentary branch coming up with another new rule."
Moore still has to propose the change to the doc branch's executive committee; if they approve it, he would then take it to the AMPAS Board of Governors.



"The executive committee may say, 'When we changed the rules last year, we decided to give it two or three years. Let's stick with that,'" he said. "Or they may say, 'You're right, why not?' I think that sometime within the next year or two, this is what we should do."
A year ago, in an effort spearheaded by Moore, the Academy overhauled its doc process in an attempt to fix what had been years of oversights, puzzling nominations and controversy over a process that put too much power in the hands of small committees.
By eliminating the committees and ensuring that the branch's 173 members would all receive screeners of every qualifying doc, Moore promised a new era of fairness, democracy and full representation.
But another rule, which was designed to weed-out made-for-TV docs and what Moore called "vanity projects" by requiring a review in the New York Times or the Los Angeles Times, failed to have any effect on the size of the field.
Michael MooreWhat's worse, Moore admitted, is that documentary releases weren't spread out through the entire year.
Voters, who earlier in the year received boxes of 10 or 12 screeners, received a package around the beginning of October that contained more than 70 screeners.  With ballots due back in early November to create the 15-film shortlist, the prospect of wading through that many docs flabbergasted branch members – and the total number of entries, which Moore said was more than 130, meant that the push to limit the number of qualifying docs had failed completely.
In fact, this year's total sets a new record for the largest number of documentaries to ever qualify for the Oscars – and it means that the category has set a new record for three consecutive years, and four out of the last five. 2008's total of 94 set a record, as did 2010's 101 and last year's 124.
(The International Documentary Association, which has less restrictive qualifying rules, also reports that the number of eligible films has gone up every year in the last five years.)
The number of films, Moore admitted, places enormous pressure on voters. "Nobody is going to watch all 132 movies," he said. "But you don't have to watch all of them.
"Nobody in any other branch feels an obligation to watch every fiction film that is released. When they pick the five nominees for Best Editing, not a single editor is saying to him or herself, 'But I didn't see "Resident Evil 3' yet! It's not fair!' Nobody goes that deep into the weeds on this."
The old committee system would have ensured that every eligible film was viewed by voters, but it would hardly have delivered fairness: Even if the majority of the branch volunteered for committee duty, the sheer number of entries this year would have meant that each film would probably have been viewed by no more than 10 members in the first round of voting.
Those numbers would make only one or two low scores potentially devastating, and would rob the vast majority of branch members of the chance to help their favorite films. (Committee members could only vote for the 12-15 films they received, which were selected randomly.)
In the aftermath of the avalanche of fourth-quarter titles (with 11 more due shortly), the doc branch sent a letter to its members pushing back the deadline to Monday, Nov. 26, which will move the release of the shortlist from mid-November into early December.
It also created a password-protected bulletin board on the AMPAS website, on which members could log in and post recommendations for films that should be seen.
Academy members are traditionally discouraged from campaigning, and Moore insists that the bulletin board will be policed. "You can't go there and campaign," he said. "You cannot attack. You cannot go on and say, 'This film sucked.' You can post a sentence or two about why voters should watch a movie."
Traverse City Film Festival(Moore himself said he plans to go on the bulletin board this week and post his own recommendations, beginning with the docs he programmed at his own Traverse City Film Festival.)
The sheer number of members of the doc branch – 173 currently, though Moore is pushing to increase that by at least 50 percent, arguing that non-fiction filmmakers deserve to make up more than three percent of the Academy – will ensure that every deserving film will be seen by enough voters to give it a chance, Moore argued.
Initially, he admitted, his reaction to the glut of releases was to try to figure out a way to change the rules to cut down on the number of eligible films. Then, in the last week, he had a change of heart and realized that that was a problematic goal.
"We're not ever going to create a perfect system," he said. "So we should just switch over to trusting ourselves, and trusting our staff to vet these films, then let the chips fall where they may.
"This is what our members do for a living. They have a sense of what to watch – and when you have 170 voting, what they watch is going to run the gamut."
Repeatedly, Moore went back to the same theme: It's time for the doc branch to stop fiddling with its qualifying rules every year, time to give up on fine-tuning its definitions of what constitutes a proper documentary.
"At some point it begins to look a little ridiculous if the Documentary Branch changes its rules every year," he said. "The intent behind it has been good, the intent has been to reform a very bad system of voting. 
"But if you look at what we do, I don't think we're better than the Directors Branch or the Actors Branch or the Writers Branch or the Editors Branch.
And I think this sense of Documentary Branch exceptionalism is not becoming of us. I think we should act and behave as every other Academy branch and every other member has to act and behave.
"I liken this to taking documentaries off the kids' table, and letting them sit with the grownups."

Thank you the wrap.com !



More info: http://www.thewrap.com/awards/column-post/michael-moores-new-plan-eliminate-oscar-documentary-rules-exclusive-60621
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Friday, October 12, 2012

Oscar's shortlist of Doc shorts


Oscar's shortlist of Doc shorts

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced today its shortlist for the field of Documentary Short Subject.

Those in the running for the 85th Annual Academy Awards include the following eight films:

The Education of Mohammad Hussein, Loki Films
Inocente, Shine Global, Inc.
Kings Point, Kings Point Documentary, Inc.
Mondays at Racine, Cynthia Wade Productions
Open Heart, Urban Landscapes Inc.
ParaÍso, The Strangebird Company
The Perfect Fit, SDI Productions Ltd.
Redemption, Downtown Docs

Three to five of them will be nominated when the Oscar nominations are announced on Jan. 10.



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Saturday, September 1, 2012

Awakening Quetzalcoalt by Catalina Ausin- trailer no.1

This is a feature documentary, coming soon...

Enjoy the 1st trailer

http://vimeo.com/33709496


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Monday, January 9, 2012

New rules for Oscar's documentary category

Acad to set new rules for docs
Changes will narrow the number of qualifying pics
By CHRISTY GROSZ
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is set to announce new rules this week for Oscar's documentary category that will have far-reaching implications for the next year's race. The biggest change is that in order for any film to qualify for the 2012-13 awards season, it must have been reviewed by either the Los Angeles Times or the New York Times, which reported the story on Sunday.
The change solves two issues for the documentary branch of the Academy, Ric Robertson told Variety. First, it will reduce the number of films that branch members must watch for the nomination process.

Second, and perhaps more importantly, it ensures that films that are nominated have distribution and have had a theatrical release.

In general, both LAT and NYT reviewers write only about documentaries that are shown in theaters, which, by default, limits the pool to films with theatrical distribution.

"We can't judge every documentary made for every possible audience," Robertson said, adding that the branch's executive committee has been looking for ways to ensure that nominated films have a "legitimate theatrical release."

"This isn't a new quest for the documentary branch, it's just a different way of trying to solve the puzzle."

The change is likely to hit the International Documentary Assn.'s DocuWeeks fairly hard because the showcase, which takes place annually in New York and Los Angeles, was designed to provide a de facto Oscar-qualifying run. For a fee, each film would play for a full week in theaters, regardless of whether a filmmaker had secured distribution.

Robertson acknowledges that DocuWeeks has been a good way for filmmakers to get their work out. "but we have to have our own criteria."

Thank you Variety.

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Monday, August 29, 2011

Call for entries, Paley Center Pitch Workshop. Deadline Aug. 31

The Paley Center for Media in Manhattan is now accepting entries for its 12th annual documentary pitch workshop for emerging directors with work-in-progress films. The late entry deadline is Wednesday, August 31.

http://www.paleycenter.org/pitch2011

This is a competition for a $5,000 finishing grant for a relatively new documentary directors (two or less projects) with a project they've started but haven't finished. This year's sponsor is The Documentary Channel.

To apply, you'll need to submit ten minutes of selects from your project. PCM chooses five finals to pitch their projects in Manhattan in late October in front of an audience and a panel of judges, who choose the winner of the grant.


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Saturday, August 27, 2011

Current TV – 50 Docus To Se Before You Die

This sounds promising.

Check it out:

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ITVS Celebrates 20 Years with Free Online Documentary Film Festival

ITVS CELEBRATES 20 YEARS OF FUNDING AND SERVICE TO INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS WITH THE ITVS INDIES SHOWCASE :

Online Film Festival Streams 20 Acclaimed Docs for Free Through September 22

The Independent Television Service (ITVS) is turning 20. To celebrate, we're launching the ITVS Indies Showcase, a free online film festival featuring a succession of 20 unforgettable documentaries July 25 to September 23. We're fortunate to be able to honor the extraordinary contributions of independent filmmakers to public television.

Each full-length program will stream for free for three days on

http://itvs.org/indies-showcase where viewers will also find a timeline of ITVS's history, film trailers, clips, interviews, an audience award contest, and more.

The ITVS Indies Showcase line-up represents a sample of the 1,000-plus productions ITVS has supported as the country's leading provider of independent films for public broadcasting.

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IRS regulations regarding tax deductions for documentary filmmaking

Does anyone know about an IRS regulation disallowing documentary filmmakers from making tax deductions during the course of their production, because documentary filmmaking is considered a hobby and not a business, intent on making a profit?

We've been in the documentary business (courterfilms) for more than 40 years and take all appropriate deductions. I have read about the Story lawsuit, but have not seen their tax returns. Of course you can take deductions if you do it right. Check with lawyers and accountants to be sure you are.

Here are some principles:

1. You can have a company that receives income that pays the expenses of making the film. It has to be funded from somewhere. For instance, a foundation gives us money to make a doc. We take all expenses and pay salaries--including ourselves. At the end, all the money is gone, but we have legitimate income from working on the film and pay taxes on that. If we had $100,000 for making the film and paid ourselves $25,000 and had $75,000 of expenses, the $75,000 are deductions. A "C" corp is different from a Sub-S, but in our case we use the latter and any extra left in the budget is taxed to us. If we end up with more expenses, we can write off the loss on our personal tax return.

The key here is you can't have losses for X out of X years.

In the case of the lawsuit, the filmmaker was also a lawyer with one assumes income from that practice. If she made a film for $300,000 and deducted that full amount from her income as both a filmmaker and an attorney and never showed a profit from filmmaking during that time, her filmmaking would be declared a hobby. This would be the same if she was deducting her horse stables or antiques business etc.

2. You can work within your own Sch. C. I am a writer. All my writing income appears on my Sch. C. I can deduct research trips to Europe, my assistant's salary, computer expense, ads, publicity etc. But again, I have to show a profit every few years. I just can't deduct the trips and goodies and not sell enough books to cover and show real income/profit. In my case, I sometimes have big sales spread across many years, but the sales are large enough to show the IRS that my writing is a legitimate business and not done for vanity or self-publishing.

Keep track of every single receipt and how you are financing your film. Pay yourself a salary. Run it like a business--which it is.

Thanks, Gay (Courterfilms)--and this advice goes for free-lancers as well.

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Thursday, June 2, 2011

Oprah’s Network Goes to the Movies

By GINIA BELLAFANTE
Published: June 1, 2011

Fifteen years ago Oprah Winfrey introduced a book club to her talk-show viewers and thus began providing the publishing industry with its own version of an entitlement program. As a subsidizer of literacy, she brought Tolstoy and Faulkner to those not necessarily in possession of the Penguin Classics while primarily shepherding forgettable middlebrow women’s fiction onto the shelves of those who might otherwise have been satisfied with People magazine. Three of her 10 selections in 1997 were children’s books by Bill Cosby, which should in itself sustain the question of her value as a national educator.

Her resources such as they are, Ms. Winfrey now has a network, OWN, and with it she is bringing her considerable imprimatur to the world of documentary film. Each month, under the rubric of a documentary club, OWN broadcasts a feature-length effort that carries the editorial judgment of Oprah Inc. Broadly speaking, something has come to say Oprah if it chronicles the spirit’s triumph over extreme adversity; if it helps, heals, inspires, ennobles, persuades, teaches, uplifts. The films appear to have been chosen according to more exacting, less hokey criteria. With a debut last month, the series continues this summer with three excellent entries: “The Sons of Perdition,” to be shown Thursday, and “Serving Life” and “Life 2.0” later on.

Implicit in the philosophy of Oprah’s Book Club was the idea that all reading is good and good for you. Ms. Winfrey has been both an absolutist and a friend of relativism, a believer in the cultural primacy of the book and yet someone who seems to feel that spending an afternoon in the company of a melodrama like Wally Lamb’s “She’s Come Undone” is just as meaningful as spending it with “Great Expectations.” Some of this Oprah-think is upended by her latest venture, as the films make a strong case not only for the power of other but also for the merits of a clean, emotionally unembellished brand of storytelling.

Beyond the cloyingly therapeutic dimensions of Ms. Winfrey’s tastes there has been a longstanding interest in narratives of dislocation, not merely in the metaphoric psychological sense but also along the more transparent lines of characters trapped in inhospitable worlds. It is this idea that has animated the film club’s initial selections.

The first book chosen for her club in September 1996 was Jacquelyn Mitchard’s “Deep End of the Ocean,” a novel about a kidnapped boy who winds up with an adoptive family living a few blocks from his biological parents. The documentary series began with “Becoming Chaz,” a movie about Chastity Bono’s uncomfortable life as a woman and subsequent sexual reassignment. But the series acquires its voice with “Sons of Perdition,” a chilling film by Jennilyn Merten and Tyler Measom, lapsed Mormons who examine young lives ruined by polygamy. The film is an essential addendum to HBO’s “Big Love,” which dramatized the abuses of fundamentalist Mormonism; it shows us just how accurate a portrayal the series rendered.

“Sons of Perdition” can be vague and confusing at times, but it conveys the tragedies of religious extremism with none of the hysteria that too often attends these kinds of projects. The film focuses on three teenage boys who leave a large polygamous community in Colorado City on the Utah-Arizona border run by the notorious Warren S. Jeffs. It shows how ill equipped the exiles are to make a transition to the mainstream. Moved to group housing with other young apostates who had succumbed to drugs and alcohol, the boys are uneducated and unmoored. In talking about the Holocaust, one confuses Bill Clinton with Hitler. They have trouble reading. A young woman confesses that she does not know the capital of the United States.

How this might have come to pass is evident in the frightening, whispery-toned recordings of preaching by Mr. Jeffs supplied here. Mr. Jeffs, who faces charges of bigamy and sexual assault in Texas, allows his followers virtually no consumption of information and entertainment. Warning his constituents that modern moviemakers are the “filthiest” people on earth, he condemns Walt Disney and the Care Bears as dangerous propagators of falsehood.

The next film in OWN’s series, “Serving Life,” is as quietly evocative of the subculture it explores, in this instance a prison hospice program at a maximum-security Louisiana penitentiary in which inmates care for the dying. The prisoners involved are selected in large part according to their fitness for withstanding the intensity. The camera turns to the most gruesome aspects of the work and demonstrates how the most broken lives can find meaning in quotidian displays of compassion.

“Life 2.0” is not a sequel but rather a look at the experiences of disparate people who have lost themselves to the virtual community Second Life, where participants assume alternate identities and conduct romantic relationships, businesses, parties and so on. The film maintains a lack of philosophical predictability even as it conveys the inherent weirdness of Second Life. Just when you think it is holding up as an example of our perilously disconnected civilization a grown man who stays up all night representing himself as an 11-year old girl, a moving story unfolds around him, one that will make you less inclined to curse the tyranny of technology if you’d be so inclined.

An obvious question surrounding the documentary club is whether it can produce an Oprah effect, the term used to describe the windfall Ms. Winfrey’s book club offered authors. Cable television is already a generous benefactor of the documentary genre, making it easy to consume worthy, journalistic cinema any night of the week. More to the point, viewers won’t have any need to buy documentaries they’ll be seeing on OWN for the cost of their cable subscriptions. All Ms. Winfrey can offer is the keenness of her filter — so far, so good.


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Monday, March 28, 2011

California is a place dv documentary site

Check it out. Interesting short documentaries, California is a place.

http://californiaisaplace.com/


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SIX MAJOR MISTAKES FILMMAKERS OFTEN MAKE

Y ELLIOTT KANBAR, PRESDIENT
QUADCINEMA 4-WALL SELECT

Being in the movie business for over 38 years (the QUAD CINEMA in New York
opened in 1972), and being an enthusiastic IDA member, I‚ve spoken to,
worked with and advised hundreds of filmmakers. Here are the 6 mistakes I've
heard and seen most often:

1. Filmmakers become obsessed with having their film play at innumerable
Film Festivals. They often measure the film's success by how many festivals
they can play in. One or two of the majors are OK. But that should be the
limit. Chances are you will not meet a distributor who will buy your film
for big bucks and it‚s unlikely your film will be reviewed in the major
media. The Festival newspapers do not count.

2. Filmmakers fail to budget at least $20,000.00 for Self Distribution,
which they most likely will have to do. Without some Self Distribution money
to start off, your film will end up on your living room shelf, a reminder of
one of your major living achievements. Filmmakers should never say upon
completion of their film that "I do not have any money left to do anything.
Help me!"

3. If you want to take the road of finding a distributor, pick one that has
a defined record of booking films like yours. There are too many
distributors out there who will take all your film rights and do nothing.
Also, do not hook up with a distributor without having an Entertainment
Lawyer advise you. Your brother-in- law who handles real estate law for a
major firm will not know what to look for.

4. Never, never, never sign away your DVD/ONLINE rights to anyone unless you
carefully compare deals offered by others. Also, this is something you can
do yourself, probably as good a job as most DVD/ONLINE distributors. And,
you control the income. If you're going to make money with your film, it
will come primarily from DVD/ONLINE sales. Trust me!

5. Too many filmmakers pick a publicist who has a great reputation, comes
highly recommended, but does not know the film business. Good PR people know
the major film players in the media. If the PR person you're considering
can't show you past results in getting films reviewed, talked and written
about in the media, very politely show him or her, the front door.

6. Filmmakers lose sight of the most important goal, which is to get the
film reviewed by the major New York film critics. Unfortunately, no other
city will do. This is by far the best way to give your film exposure,
credibility and the "hook" to stand out in this field crowded with thousands
of other indie films.


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Don't Miss Award-winning Desert of Forbidden Art in NY&LA

Desert of Forbidden Art's run is extended until Mar 31 in NYC @ Cinema
Village and expanding into 4 more theaters in LA @ Laemmle Sunset 5, Monica
4, Playhouse 7 (Pasadena) and Fallbrook 7 (West Hills). Filmmakers in person
for selected Q&As.

Tell all your friends. The paintings are a feast for anyone who loves art
and there is nothing like seeing them on the big screen.

For more info go to www.laemmle.com or

www.desertofforbiddenart.com/screenings

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Brighterplanet Budget for Docs

Chicken & Egg Pictures, one of the Documentary grant makers, is asking:

We encourage you to calculate your carbon footprint, using the
Brighter Planet website and offset your omissions. Incorporate your
carbon footprint offset figure as a line item in your budget."

http://www.brighterplanet.com/

Brighter planet is a great initiative to make us all more
environmentally-aware citizens, but I am at a loss as to what extent I
should calculate the environmental impact of my doc. From shipping a
package to using transportation for shooting, to using computers to
edit, you name it.

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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Why documentaries matter by Nick Fraser

From the Oscar-winning Inside Job to heartthrob physicist Professor Brian Cox, documentaries are now one of our most valuable – but neglected – art forms

You lose count of the number of times you hear documentaries trashed. The argument is as old as the documentary, and it goes like this. Docs manipulate reality, over-relying on effects such as music. They aren't really journalistic at all. Maybe one should think of them as drama without actors, cheaply made and with few pretensions to seriousness. Shamelessly, they pander to our worst voyeuristic impulses. Under the guise of telling the truth, docs entertain us with lies.

It would be more accurate to say that documentaries are among the most valuable, neglected cultural forms of our time. They aren't all good, to be sure, but the best are unusual, persuasive, seductive. And their success has something to do with the way they are taken for granted, casually watched. Few old things have flourished in the cultural chaos of this century, but docs have steadily consolidated their hold on a small portion of the contemporary consciousness. Film stars want to make or sponsor them. Sometimes, if you squint hard enough, they really do seem like the new rock'n'roll.

Criticism of documentaries comes in waves. A few years ago, spotting fakery in docs was in vogue, though it seemed that most docs were scrupulously, often tediously, unfaked. Now the critics have latched on to the vulgarity of peak-time docs. Channel 4 has been slated for My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding. Was the series set up in some respects? Did it end by stereotyping Romanies under the guise of complaining about their stereotyping? The critics also complained about the superficiality of Niall Ferguson, whose Channel 4 series, Civilization, runs us through the west and its discontents.

But the most acrimonious debate surrounded the attempts of physicist, and heartthrob, Professor Brian Cox to explain the secrets of the universe in Wonders of the Universe. Master of the Queen's Music Sir Peter Maxwell Davies complained about the use of "Muzak" in the BBC2 series. "Viewers have not tuned in to listen to a musical performance," he declared.

I didn't much like Ferguson's leather jacket. I also think he should try to convey to audiences that he cares about what he's saying – something he does in his lectures, but mysteriously fails to do on television. And, yes, I did think that Channel 4's wedding series contained a few too many Gypsy flounces. But I was seduced by Cox's meditations. He made me recall hours spent watching a black-and-white box as a teenager. I don't know much about the universe, beyond the piece I occupy, but now I wanted to know more. And I'm sure that many of its five million viewers felt the same.

Many criticisms of documentaries contain an unpleasantly snobbish undertone. Why object to shows like The Secret Millionaire, which do supply a vision of real life even as they follow a formula?

"Documentary," says the dictionary. "Noun. Based on or recreating an actual event, era, life story, that purports to be factually accurate and contains no fictional elements." This is useful, but a trifle over-cautious. Why shouldn't non-fiction contain elements of fiction? And why should something only "purport" to be factually accurate? It reeks of the old charges that docs are unreliable because they are filmed. When you describe anything, it is altered. The act of seeing modifies what is seen. Most people who watch docs understand this.

I'm a professional watcher of documentaries, but I'm also an addict. Within the dullest doc, I usually find something interesting. In an age when television drama is predictable, docs offer us real, often alien voices. They also fill some of the void left by the emptiness of much television reporting.

No body of theory exists to legitimise docs and I'm grateful for this. They have come to subsist at a crossroads of contemporary culture, somewhere between journalism, film narrative and television entertainment. They appear to thrive on contradictions, between the stubborn reality they purport to capture and their necessarily limited means, between the impositions of storytelling and the desire to interpret or analyse. They aren't fictional, ever, but they can seem in their attractiveness more real than reality.

In recent years, docs have often performed well in cinemas. It has become customary at chic festivals to hear people say how much more interesting they are than the narrative fictions on offer. I don't think docs can or should try to stand in for Hollywood fare. They do something different. A film like Man on Wire was a way of approaching the 9/11 attacks at an angle, elegiacally, getting us to imagine what the twin towers meant by seeing someone walk between them.

This year's Oscar winner, Inside Job, an unflinching account of the venal goings-on that led to the 2009 Wall Street crash, has been justly praised. Its director Charles Ferguson's brilliant, unforgiving interviews have become the way we remember the crash. When he thanked the Oscar audience for giving him the opportunity to say that not one individual has been found guilty of fraud in relation to the crash, I felt it was a vindication of the capability of good documentaries. Film can speak truth to the powerful. And people will listen.

But I worry about the future of docs. Of course the supply of docu-soaps won't be allowed to dry up. I imagine Chinese versions of Niall Ferguson showing up to tell us where we screwed up. However, budgets are falling as television strives to focus on whatever is popular. It is getting harder to sustain the rarer fowl in the documentary menagerie.

I recently talked to television critic AA Gill about this. He suggested that anyone wanting to make a film could now go and do it, so simple had the technology become. One might only make one film in life, but it could be a good one – and that would ensure the future of documentaries. People do make brilliant first films, but rarely. It takes time to become really good. The best docs are provisional. They seem to come from beyond the perimeters of the world, which accounts both for their freshness, and the relative poverty of those who make them.

One such film, shown this week on BBC4, is Marathon Boy, which tells the story of Budhia, an Indian boy who ran astonishing distances. He was adopted by his trainer and found himself at the centre of a controversy involving politicians, social workers and journalists. Is stardom a way out of poverty? Who has the right to define abuse? For film-maker Gemma Atwal, born in India and adopted by an English couple, such questions are far from remote. Without giving answers, the film brilliantly explores Budhia's fate. It's easy to talk about the effects of poverty, but in this film you can see them.

Will these documentaries – low budget, clever, appealing to small, passionate audiences – be adequately funded in the squeeze on television budgets? I'm starting to worry. I'd like to know how their independent spirit can be conserved and nurtured.

In the meantime, let me suggest a way in which we might start to think about documentaries. Of the current manifestations of contemporary culture, which would you choose to preserve? Thought of as an app, documentaries wouldn't make it. They have no real cultural recognition. They will always be seen as part of something else – film, television, journalism, even real life. But you would miss them if they went. My hunch is that you would miss them very much.

Nick Fraser is series editor of Storyville on BBC4

Thanks the Guardian!

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Saturday, March 12, 2011

Fiscal Examination: Investigating Funding Opportunities at Nonprofits

By Tracie Lewis


Have you ever thought, "I have an interesting story for a film; I just need the money to make it?" Fiscal sponsorship could be the answer.

Having a film or project fiscally sponsored gives a filmmaker access to nonprofit funding. Many foundations will only issue grant money to 501(c)(3) organizations. Filmmakers can set up their own nonprofit status, but that's a lengthy and expensive process. Most filmmakers enter into a fiscal sponsorship agreement with a nonprofit organization to receive tax-deductible donations from businesses and individuals to fund projects.

The benefits of being fiscally sponsored are numerous. First, it demonstrates that a film has additional support beyond the production team. There's now an organization attached that shares the same vision and allows the opportunity for monetary contributions to aid in completing the film. According to Michele Turnure-Salleo, director of filmmaker services at the San Francisco Film Society (SFFS), "San Francisco Film Society offers a full suite of filmmaker-service programs and activities designed to foster creativity and further the careers of independent filmmakers, and fiscal sponsorship is a great point into the organization. As a result of working so closely with filmmakers, we are able to determine how we can help them in a multitude of ways with the various programs we offer--such as education, grants and residencies."

Second, the filmmaker, nonprofit organization and funding sources are all on board and share a vision for the film or project. Amy Halpin, program manager of fiscal sponsorship and grants at the International Documentary Association (IDA), says, "Having fiscal sponsorship means that individual donors who want to see your film get made can get an immediate tax deduction, as well as the added peace of mind that the project is being monitored by an organization with a 28-year track-record."

Third, the filmmaker has more time to spend on the project. "Fiscal sponsorship allows the filmmaker time to focus on the creation of the work, rather than on the administration of running a 501(c)(3) organization," says Dianne Debicella, program director of fiscal sponsorship at the New York-based Fractured Atlas.

Fourth, the opportunity to have experienced filmmakers evaluate proposals and budgets before sending them out to funders is priceless. Proposals and budgets are required in practically every case when applying for funding. A great place to start when preparing a documentary budget is by reading An Introduction to Documentary Budgeting by Robert Bahar (www.doculink.org/downloads/introdocbudgetbahar.pdf). Don't be shy about calling around and asking for real numbers when doing a budget.

The filmmaker should also have clear information of what is expected during the relationship with the organization and the funding sources. Understanding the legal obligations before entering into an agreement with the nonprofit can prevent frustration later down the line. Do your homework and research several organizations first. Talk to others who have gone through the program. Consult with a lawyer or tax consultant before embarking on any agreements and before receiving any money. Beware of investors who want to give money to your film and expect a monetary reward as the outcome. In fact, according to Debicella, "Fiscally sponsored projects can't actively seek investors, or have investors involved with the project while sponsored by Fractured Atlas."

Ultimately, the success of a project depends on the clear vision and hard work of the filmmaker. From a fiscal sponsorship point-of-view, there are several ways to have a successful project. Turnure-Salleo's list includes: an excellent engaging synopsis, a clear sense of the film's progression of how the story will be told or how the information will be conveyed, emotionally engaging characters, a proposal that builds on the readers' knowledge rather than repeating the same information, a multi-faceted fundraising strategy, an intriguing and impressive bio that shows that the filmmaker is committed and capable and has a unique relationship to the subject, a well-conceived distribution/marketing and outreach strategy, a solid artistic and management team, a realistic budget, and a clean looking, spell-checked proposal without too many different fonts, or fancy paper or binders.

Regarding common mistakes filmmakers make as they struggle to get their films made, Turnure-Salleo observes, "They partner with individuals who don't really share their vision. They are reluctant to hear constructive criticism or feedback. They try to rush the project for a festival deadline when really it needs a few months more with an editor." Three documentary projects that have successfully attracted funding through the fiscal sponsorship program at SFFS are Traces of the Trade by Katrina Browne, Beyond the Call by Adrian Belic and Connected by Tiffany Shlain.

"Successful projects often have diverse income streams, including earned revenue, individual contributions [cash and in-kind], government and foundation grants, and some corporate support, including in-kind, grants, matching gifts and sponsorship," Dibicella stresses. "Set up a fundraising plan and decide when, how and from whom you are going to ask for money. That will help to stay focused and ensure success." According to Dibicella, successful documentaries funded through Fractured Atlas' program include Sex Positive by Daryl Wein, William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe by Emily and Sarah Kunstler and The Tijuana Project by John Sheedy.

"Most filmmakers are good at telling you the story and not necessarily good at telling about the film they are going to make," Halpin says. "In addition to telling us what the story is, we want you to tell us how you are going to tell it. What kind of access do you have? Who are the key players? Documentaries are visual, obviously, so what is the project going to look like? What are we going to see, hear and feel while we watch this film? What is the structure? What type of music will we hear? What type of images will we see?

"Funders like to know that the project that they are helping to fund is going to get made and get seen," Halpin continues. "If they don't see that you have a strategy to raise the money to make your film, they are not going to want to give you even a little bit of money for a film that isn't going to get finished." Having a great relationship with a foundation has been very beneficial for filmmaker and former IDA board member Michael King. According to Halpin, King's project, entitled The Rescuers, is one of IDA's biggest fundraisers to date, with more than $2 million secured. "The foundation and I have had a long-term relationship since I won an Emmy 15 years ago for Bangin', a documentary on youth violence," says King, who declined to disclose his foundation.

Tia Lessin and Carl Deal, producers/directors of the 2009 Academy Award-nominated feature documentary Trouble the Water, raised approximately $90,000 of grant support through IDA's fiscal sponsorship program. Lessin notes, "The most effective ways we raised money for our film was from formal grant proposals, informal meetings, letters and updates, invitations to screenings, and relationship-building with grantors."

Even though there are several success stories about generous grant donors, other methods of fundraising are becoming increasingly popular. In the social networking age, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and blogging can cultivate audiences by providing updates on projects. Audience-building will get people interested and therefore increase the pool of potential donors. Other popular dedicated websites for fundraising such as Kickstarter and IndieGoGo are being explored by filmmakers.

"Grant support in the US is declining each year, while individuals continue to give steadily to the arts," Dibicella points out. "It's a common misconception that there is a ton of grant money out there and that it is easy to obtain. I try to encourage our projects to focus more of their attention on individual support rather than grant support."

Fundraising for a project takes time and hard work. However, here is a plan that most everyone agrees with: Never give up!



Here is some basic information about each of the three fiscal sponsorship programs cited in this article.

Fractured Atlas

The project must be artistic and not for a commercial profit.
Any ongoing or temporary project in the arts is eligible for sponsorship.
About 99 percent of the applications received are approved.
Applications are accepted on an ongoing basis and the monthly deadline is the last day of each month. The board reviews applications at the beginning of the following month and issues approvals no later than the 15th of the following month for the pending applications.
Following approval of your application, you can expect to be up and running within two to three weeks.
Fractured Atlas charges a 6 percent administrative fee.
Online donations by credit card (up to $5,000 per transaction) are accepted, with no additional fee for credit card processing.
Donors may make automatic recurring monthly donations.
Fractured Atlas can accept and process non-cash donations of equipment and materials.
Fund-release checks are issued weekly at the sponsored artist's request.
Fractured Atlas provides a complete set of online tools for managing sponsored funds (i.e., checking the fund balance, viewing donation and fund-release history, looking up donor contact information, processing new donations, etc.)
Fractured Atlas maintains an online profile for each fiscally sponsored project, as well as a link to the project's website.
The program is structured to ensure that you should never owe any taxes on money Fractured Atlas disburses.


International Documentary Association (IDA)

IDA works exclusively with documentary filmmakers or projects that have a substantial documentary component.
IDA has a committee of experienced filmmakers that evaluates every proposal.
In most cases, the review process takes about a month.
The fiscal sponsorship program has a rolling application deadline, so you can apply any time. IDA accepts about 10 to 15 new projects into the program each month.
IDA charges a 5 percent administrative fee.
IDA accepts donations by check, credit card, PayPal, wire transfer or donation of stock.
Projects can accept online donations through IDA's website or on Facebook.
IDA recently began accepting non-cash donations of tangible goods such as camera and editing equipment and office supplies.
IDA will sponsor applications for government grants when eligible.
IDA can now accept tax-deductible donations from Canada.
IDA has sponsored over 700 films since the program began formally in 1998.
Documentary projects collectively raised over $3 million in 2009.
Special fiscal sponsorship discounts are available to some IDA programs.
IDA works with all genres of documentaries in all stages of production.
Project directors can put in requests to withdraw funds when they are ready to spend them. The requests are made online, and IDA issues checks about once a week.


San Francisco Film Society (SFFS)

Submit a $40 application fee online.
All projects must be non-commercial and represent an imaginative, even transformative, contribution to film/video and to the society at large.
SFFS charges a 7 percent administrative fee.
Checks are deposited in SFFS' bank account. Once they clear the accounting department, a check will be issued to the filmmaker, usually the following week.
Checks are sent out to filmmakers, along with copies of donor checks or credit card transactions.
SFFS will send a letter for donations of $250 or more, in accordance with IRS regulations, stating that the tax-deductible donation was received.
Only monetary donations processed through SFFS are eligible for a tax receipt, which the film society will provide directly. SFFS cannot provide tax receipts for non-monetary items, which also means that you cannot provide receipts for these items in the film society's name or with its tax ID.
The receipts you provide are an acknowledgment of the receipt of goods or services to your project; this is not a tax receipt, since these contributions cannot be processed through the film society as your fiscal sponsor.
If someone makes a monetary donation to your project that you accept directly without going through the film society, you can issue them a receipt yourself. This is not a tax receipt.


Tracie J. Lewis is a writer and producer, as well as a programmer at Film Independent. She has previously applied for fiscal sponsorship.

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