In industry
terms, film festivals are usually used as launch pads for films. Attended by
acquisition executives and talent scouts, festivals are full of new product and
fresh talent. Acquisition executives rely on the choices made by festival
programmers to filter through the vast array of material in circulation.
Individual festivals have built reputations based on their programming. In Europe,
Rotterdam, Berlin, Raindance and Cannes all make unique programming choices
that distinguish each festival from the other.
A film
festival’s role is to provide an audience of receptive and appreciative
filmgoers to view your work. Distributors can also use the festival to build
publicity for their film before its commercial release. A festival is also a
place where acquisition executives can discover new talent as they have a
platform to screen their first shorts and features.
So why should
you be there too?
Four Reasons
to Attend Film Festivals
1 Do a deal
The primary
reason for submitting your film to a film festival is to have it screened in
front of acquisition executives who will ‘discover’ your film and make you an
offer on the spot. If you are attending one of the smaller festivals, it is
unlikely that this will happen. Film buyers travel through the major and
mini-major festivals and would only consider a side trip to your screening at a
smaller festival if you carefully planned the publicity surrounding your
screening. They might reasonably ask why you had not been accepted into a
larger, more convenient festival.
Raindance
Film Festival Open For Submissions
2 Win awards
If you read
bios of filmmakers, you will often see the phrase ‘an award-winning filmmaker’,
but the names of the awards are never mentioned. That is because there are only
three awards worth naming on a CV.
The most
prestigious award is the Oscar™. Even a nomination is mentioned on a
filmmaker’s CV. The Academy has carefully presented itself to the industry as a
credible event, although in recent years it has become known as a marketing
contest with the cleverest and most expensive marketing campaigns winning the
awards.
Following
that, the Palme d’Or at Cannes is highly esteemed. Its cachet has become
established because it is judged by very high profile industry jurors at the
most important film festival of the year. The third most sought-after award is the
Golden Bear presented at the Berlin Film Festival.
Many
festivals offer awards to any filmmaker attending their festival as a means of
attracting entries. A friend of mine, Dov Simens, had a 20-minute live action
short starring William Forsythe. He submitted to the Montreal Film Festival
knowing that they had a 35mm live action science fiction short film category
and gave out gold, silver and bronze medals. There was one other entrant – Dov
won the bronze. A few weeks later he did the same thing at the Cincinnati Film
Festival and now calls himself a multiple award-winning filmmaker.
3 Sit on a
panel / do Q&As
If award
winning is not your thing, then get yourself invited to sit on a panel. Not
only will it help you hone your public speaking skills, but you can then claim
that you were directly involved with the festival. Alternatively, agree to a
post-screening Q&A. Audiences are always keen to ‘meet’ the filmmakers and
a personal appearance will help sell tickets.
4 Getting
reviewed
Film
journalists really do not enjoy film festivals. Suppose your first film
festival is a small regional film festival, a mom and pop film festival. The
local weekly newspaper will have a film journalist who creates the weekly
centre spread on movies from the press kits supplied by the major distributors.
But with the film festival approaching, s/he will have to watch all the films
entered into the festival and write reviews. As a producer, you want a good
review, and hope and pray that the pictures you sent to the festival with your
press kit are attractive enough to get printed in the newspaper.
The film
journalist for this small weekly newspaper also has career aspirations. S/he
would like to work on one of the daily papers, or get a job reviewing films on
a radio or television station. Because the newspaper is so small they also have
to cover the horse racing, but a festival really gives them some hope of a
ticket out of Smallsville. Journalists have learned that they should always
print a superlative in their review, even if they hate it, because they know
you will quote their review out of context. For example: ‘Elliot’s first film
is a fine example of how not to make a movie’ becomes ‘Elliot’s first film is a
fine example’.
When you
quote the journalist out of context they then can include your quote in their
portfolio. If their quote makes it onto your poster, be certain you include
their name and publication and send them a copy!
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