On Wed, 23 Oct 2002 14:18:57 GMT, "Ross" wrote:

Take Advantage - Indie Filmmakers Should Put their Movies on PUBLIC ACCESS

Be Realistic and question the motive for WHY you made your movie. Very few
theaters can exhibit your movie unless you have a 35mm film print of it. If
your movie was shot on Digital Video, then chances are you couldn't afford
16mm film, nonetheless 35mm film, and you SURE can't afford to get a 35mm
film print made of your DV movie ($375-450 a minute to get one) and if you
did, it wouldn't look very good. If you made you movies to get watched, put
it where they can see it. Public Access television offers a chance to be
seen. A lot.

Cable Access is an untapped gold mine. It's piped into 1.2 million homes
here in Central Ohio and it's FREE. It's the channel that no one watches,
but everyone sees. Ever notice how no one talks about what they saw on
public access like it was ALIAS, but mention the cheesiest show and you'll
find that everyone knows what it is and have at least SEEN it.

Why? PEOPLE ARE CHANNEL SURFERS. Most people flip by every channel on their
way too see Seinfeld re-runs or a "Charlie's Angel's" marathon on TNN. Most
people do not know what channel the TV is on when they start going UP or
DOWN. If something good or different is on, people will stop and check it
out. Good god, even if it's BAD people tend to stop to at least give it a
look.

The connotation for Public Access or Cable Access (same thing) is that
everything on it is bad. A lot of what IS on cable access is horrid,
amateur, bad concept shows. Well, put your own movies on there. For some
reason, people believe that they cannot put their stuff on cable access
because everything on the channel is bad, and somehow, like a bad magic
trick, if they put their good movie on Public Access TV, is will transform
into a BAD movie. If you truly believe what you are making is good, then you
should have no fear.

There is a flip side for Indie filmmakers too, which is this fanciful belief
that their movie is such a prized intellectual property that is so in
demand, they don't want anyone but the highest studio execs to see it. We're
talking about a movie written by amateurs (like you & me) who shoot with a
camcorder over a weekend or two with no name stars. Something happens and
delusions of grandeur permeate and make the writer/director/producers of
such DV shorts think that this is a hot property and has some intrinsic
value. The thought that putting it on Cable Access might disqualify them for
SUNDANCE scares them into ego. Sundance is a pipe dream from hell. Do some
homework. You think you have a chance at Sundance? The Sundance Film
Festival features shorts shot on 35mm film written & direct by Danny Glover
and Gary Oldman and THEY have to compete for the same slots. These guys kiss
ass in person to Sundance to get selected. Where do you think SLAMDANCE came
from? And then NO DANCE? People couldn't get into Sundance.

For most markets, there is a Public Access STATION, and they accept tapes of
your movies on VHS, or ¾" tape, or some of the more sophisticated places DV.
You can submit your short films as FILLER, meaning: rounding out the half
hour or full hour TV shows submitted. Or work with others & put together a
30 minute or 60 minute show of compiled short films. Or wait until you have
30-60 minutes of your OWN material and make a show. Find out the
unadulterated opinion of the public about your movies. If they talk about
your movies in the same way they do the guy who's show is 30 minutes staring
at yacht's, then maybe you need to rethink your once burgeoning movie
career. Or maybe people might become fans of your work. You won't know until
you try.

Get the exposure. Get your movie seen by people. Don't live in a dreamland
where you think Film Festivals with their $30-200 entry fees are your only
option. I said it before, I'll say it again.if you want to be discovered,
you have to be somewhere they can find you.

--
- ROss
www.sOnnybOO.cOm


Thanks for a great post!
(Time t' round up a bunch of
odds-'n'-ends I've produced
over the years an' drag 'em
over t' Channel 13...;-)