MovieMaker The Art and Business of Making Movies » Login | Register  

May 26, 2012

ABOUT | CONTACT | NEWSLETTER | Search

Hands-On-Pages Interviews

Acting | Associations | Auteur | Cinematography | Digital | Directing | Editing | Education | Exhibition | Festivals | Indie Movie Guide | Internet | Locations | Producing | Screenwriting

Page 2 of 18 pages  <  1 2 3 4 >  Last »

Joshua Zeman Investigates the Truth Behind Cropsey

Imagine the basic premise of The Blair Witch Project—young moviemakers on a quest to unravel a bogeyman of their past—but then imagine that it all really happened. (15 comments)


Asbury Shorts Celebrates 30 Years

Richard Belzer attends an Asbury event.

The Asbury Short Film Show of New York celebrates its 30th anniversary with a special July 21st short film show and jazz concert at Washington Park in Brooklyn, New York. (17 comments)


Live from Cannes 2010: John Kochman & Henry Deas

(2 comments)


Learn From the Best at EditFest NY

The 2010 EditFest NY, presented by American Cinema Editors (ACE) and the Manhattan Edit Workshop, will give editors and those interested in editing the chance to learn from some of the best editors currently in the business. (12 comments)


Daddy Longlegs Comes to NYC

In Ben and Joshua Safdie's new movie, Daddy Longlegs, Ronald Bronstein plays Lenny, a father whose custody agreement allows him to see his two children for only two weeks out of the year. During this short period he tries to take care of them, but it's perfectly clear from the bad decisions he makes that he has yet to grow up himself. (1 comment)


Bryan Greenberg Shoots The Perfect Game

In 1957, a little league team from Mexico pitched the only perfect game in history and, even more amazingly, became the first non-U.S. team to win the Little League World Series. (12 comments)


Can Scriptapalooza Launch Your Career?

Scriptapalooza is not all about prize money (though there is that; the first place winner gets $10,000). Three recent Scriptapalooza top-placers have taken the time to answer a few of MovieMaker’s questions about their scripts, Scriptapalooza and how the competition has helped them get their screenwriting careers off the ground. (4 comments)


San Francisco School of Digital Filmmaking Offers Free Day of Film School

SFSDF on the set of Sundance award-winning director Tanuj Chopra's <i>Pia</i>.

Located in the heart of the Bay Area, six-year-old San Francisco School of Digital Filmmaking (SFSDF) has quickly emerged as a hands-on moviemaking mecca. To give people a taste of their hands-on atmosphere, every few months the school invites prospective students to their "Free Day of Film School," where visitors get to see what's in store if they decide to attend SFSDF. (23 comments)


Circalit Creates a Social Network for Scribes

Labeled as the first-ever social networking Website just for screenwriters, Circalit allows scribes of any experience level to upload their screenplays and showcase their work to producers, agents and directors. MM recently caught up with CEO and founder Raoul Tawadey to discuss this great opportunity for screenwriters. (11 comments)


Talbot Perry Simons Learns By Doing

"I have created a different way to make a film—a process that allows a first-time moviemaker (like myself) to be able to make a good film," claims veteran actor and first-time director (with Still the Drums) Talbot Perry Simons.
(1 comment)


Christopher Kyle Brings The Seven Sins to the Silver Screen

Christopher Kyle—screenwriter of Alexander and K-19 The Widowmaker—talks to MovieMaker about his latest project, The Seven Sins: The Tyrant Ascending, and why comparing a novel to its cinematic adaptation is like saying steak is better than bicycles. (4 comments)


International Academy of Film & TV Flourishes in the Philippines

What are your options when you decide to go to film school? Many people would automatically say you’d be best served going to Los Angeles or New York City. Keith Sensing, executive director of the International Academy of Film and Television (IAFT), is hoping to change that. (10 comments)


Sam Levy Gets Romantics

Sam Levy studied as a cinematography fellow at the Sundance Institute Director's Lab in 2007. Three years later, he has returned to Park City as the director of photography on Galt Niederhoffer's film The Romantics. (6 comments)


Cigarettes, Accordions and Movies in Serbia

Emir Kusturica’s third Küstendorf Film and Music Festival honors Johnny Depp and the spirit of independence

I just returned from Serbia, where my husband, MM Publisher Tim Rhys, and I attended a strange and fascinating film festival at the home and “personal village” of famed Serbian auteur moviemaker, musician and actor, Emir Kusturica, deep in the mountains of the Mokra Gora region near Bosnia. (7 comments)


Brian Wimmer Takes Action at X-Dance

Established in 2001, Salt Lake City's X-Dance Action Sports Film Festival has become one of the few viable outlets for extreme sports moviemaking. (11 comments)


Giles Nuttgens Almost Loses A Teardrop Diamond

Bryce Dallas Howard stars in <i>The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond</i> (2010).

When The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond’s original director of photography dropped from the project, director Jodie Markell’s first move was to phone cinematographer Giles Nuttgens. (10 comments)


Calgary International Film Festival Goes Maverick

Chris Chong Chan Fui's <i>Karaoke</i>

One of the largest film fests in Canada, the Calgary International Film Festival (CIFF) is dedicated to honoring burgeoning moviemakers from around the world who possess an undying passion for their craft. (4 comments)


Sarasota Film: A-Listers and Indies

Sarasota's Siesta Point of Rocks

Jeanne Corcoran, director of the Sarasota County Film and Entertainment Office, tells MM why every moviemaker should seriously consider Sarasota County as a location for his or her next film. (4 comments)


Smooth Sailing After 30 Years of Full Sail

On a list of the top three new media schools in the country, one would expect to find such esteemed institutions as MIT and NYU, but Full Sail University? (55 comments)


Angelus Student Film Festival Goes Global

Laura Waters Hinson (<i>As We Forgive</i>) surrounded by standing room only audience in Prague, Czech Republic.

Angelus Student Film Festival director Monika Moreno discusses the past, present and future of the festival here with MovieMaker. (2 comments)


Los Angeles Film School’s Gateway to Hollywood

Located in the heart of Hollywood, the Los Angeles Film School offers aspiring moviemakers an ideal learning environment. Students have access to the latest moviemaking equipment, as well as 350-seat theater and multiple sound stages. (5 comments)


Johnny Otto Takes It One Day at a Time

Johnny Otto is no stranger to the difficulties moviemakers face when trying to turn aspirations into reality. (1 comment)


Royal Flush, Killer Fest

Judging from the poster for the upcoming Royal Flush Festival in New York City, kicking off today, audiences are in for one crazy festival! (5 comments)


Get Your Freak Show On

Festival director Robert J. Massetti.

Horror fans may have a new destination for an early Halloween this year. From October 9-11, the Freak Show Horror Film Festival will take place at the Wyndham Orlando Resort in Florida. (4 comments)


Dino Gallina Rides the Red Tide

The University of Central Florida's M.F.A. Entrepreneurial Digital Cinema program requires its students to not only create a feature-length film, but also to raise the $50,000 in order to make it. That seems like quite an intimidating task, especially in this economy, but students' UCF films have met with success. (9 comments)


Mill Valley Film Festival Celebrates Number 32

Photo: Margot Duane

Now in its 32nd year, the Mill Valley Film Festival is dedicated to screening the best in independent and world cinema. (3 comments)


Doorpost is About More Than Money

The Doorpost Film Project truly is unique in the world of short film festivals. It receives hundreds of submissions, and from those selects 10 finalists. Here’s the good part: The finalists then receive a $30,000 budget to create a new film. The winner of this championship round receives a $100,000 cash prize.

But, as moviemaker Brent McCorkle knows, Doorpost isn’t all about the money: It’s also about the support and encouragement you receive, both from the contest staff and fellow moviemakers. McCorkle, whose short film The Rift made it to the top 10, took the time to answer some of MovieMaker’s questions about his film and the festival. (2 comments)


Marshall Curry Documents Newark and NASCAR

Marshall Curry shooting his latest doc, <i>Racing Dreams</i>.

When Marshall Curry took a break from his job working for a Web design company so that he could make films, he had not been to film school nor had he received any formal film training; he went out, bought a camera and started shooting. (14 comments)


SAE Institute Continues Its Global Domination

When the SAE Institute commenced its first nine-month course in Sydney, Australia, with a four-track Sony tape recorder and a 12-channel mixing console, not even founder Tom Misner knew how much they would expand in the next three decades. (3 comments)


Downtown Film Festival Highlights L.A.’s Cinematic History

The Downtown Film Festival - Los Angeles has become a vital part of the film scene in the historic center of L.A. The festival seeks to emphasize the area’s cinematic roots by bringing a wide variety of films, both shorts and feature-length, to downtown Los Angeles. (3 comments)


Sean Gaston Views His Rough Cut

L to R: Sean Gaston and <i>Rough Cut</i> director of photography James Hollenbaugh.<br />

When two independent, Pennsylvania moviemakers set out to make their first film, Through Hike: A Ghost Story, little did anyone suspect that the gory horror tale would prompt a brutal murder, complete with its own terrible consequences. (3 comments)


Imagine Science Film Festival’s Science of Cinema

When uttered in the same breath, the words "science" and "cinema" will more often than not elicit images of light saber swordplay, viscous green creatures and wildly inconceivable viruses. However, Imagine Science Film Festival director and founder Alexis Gambis has his own notions about the unique combination, potentially explosive for both scientists and moviemakers alike. (4 comments)


Teresa Fahs is Haunting Kira

Renowned as the "female version of Tom Savini," special makeup effects artist Teresa Fahs began her career a decade ago as a figure sculptor. Today, she is a highly successful prosthetic designer and macabre makeup effects wizard. (7 comments)


Marc Fienberg Knows How to Play the Game

Marc Fienberg is making his debut into full-length features will full force. He is the writer, director and producer of Play the Game, starring Andy Griffith, Doris Roberts and Paul Campbell. (4 comments)


In the Trenches and Over 40

The In the Trenches Team (l to r): Judith Drake, Claire Callaway, Debbie Zipp, Jan Bina

Debbie Zipp, COO of In the Trenches Productions, is serious about making sure that women over 40 get fair representation in the film industry. (4 comments)


Page 2 of 18 pages  <  1 2 3 4 >  Last »

Blog/Forum/Poll navigation

Blog Forums Polls
Latest from the blog:
 

Blog

SITE DELIVERY OPTIONS

producing Listings

FEATURED LISTINGS

View All

  

Add Listing

Email Newsletter

Get MovieMaker in your Inbox!

Email:
Format Options: HTML TEXT