Tuesday, January 29, 2008

SUNDANCE

SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL WINNERS


Sunday, January 27

FROZEN RIVER, a film about a struggling single mother in upstate New York who teams with a Mohawk woman to smuggle people across the Canadian border, has won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. The film, a debut feature from writer/director Courtney Hunt, is adapted it from her own 2004 short of the same name. The film was one of a handful to actually be picked up by a major distributor during the Festival......having found a home with arthouse distributor Sony Pictures Classics in a deal reported at less than $1 Million (a steal). In an interesting twist, FROZEN RIVER becomes the third film in a row to win the top Sundance prize to deal with the subject of immigration (the other two films in the troika: PADRE NUESTRO last year and QUINCENERA the year before).

FROZEN RIVER (www.frozenriver.com) takes place in the days before Christmas near a little-known border crossing on the Mohawk reservation between New York State and Quebec. Here, the lure of fast money from illegal smuggling presents a daily challenge to single moms who would otherwise be earning minimum wage. Two women- one white, one Mohawk, both single mothers faced with desperate circumstances- are drawn into the world of border smuggling across the frozen water of the St. Lawrence River. Melissa Leo (21 GRAMS, THE THREE BURIALS OF MELQUIADES ESTRADA) and Misty Upham (EDGE OF AMERICA, DREAMKEEPER) star as the two women, with Oscar nominee Michael O'Keefe (THE GREAT SANTINI) playing the New York State Trooper who ultimately brings the two to justice.

With its Sundance win, the film will certainly be making the rounds of the international film festival circuit and will open in theaters by the end of the year. Sony Pictures Classics is a pro in extending the life of films that can be described as "small" and "specialized". However, it remains to be seen if the film will be a breakthrough. It is well known in the industry that a Sundance win is no guarantee of mainstream boxoffice success. The past two year's winners, which have comparable immigration themes, hardly made a ripple. PADRE NUESTRO, which was released by IFC Films in May, made less than $100,000 in the US. QUINCENERA, which was released by Sony Pictures Classics, fared better, but did not crack the $2 Million mark. However, considering the low budgets of all three films, breaking even with a modest profit is certainly possible. Pickups of Sundance winners is more of a "prestige buy" for a distributor anyway.

TROUBLE THE WATER

As in past years, the documentaries at Sundance captured much of the critical and industry attention. Although several high profile Sundance docs from last year were also rather anemic at the box office, (including the superb, important and Oscar nominated NO END IN SIGHT), documentaries still are among the best "bangs for the buck", because of their modest budgets and their built-in thematic interests that can benefit from viral marketing rather than traditional media ad buys. The Documentary Grand Jury Prize is very much in this historic investigation tradition. TROUBLE THE WATER (www.troublethewaterfilm.com) , about the survival of a New Orleans couple through Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. The film, produced and directed by Tia Lessin and Carl Deal (who served as supervising producers on Michael Moore's BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE and FAHRENHEIT 9/11), utilizes footage shot by one of its subjects, Kimberly Rivers Roberts. Roberts traveled to the festival with her husband Scott and gave birth to a daughter, Skyy, in Salt Lake City on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. TROUBLE THE WATER makes unapologetically clear that Hurricane Katrina rages on as an unnatural disaster of governmental and journalistic neglect.

THE WACKNESS

THE WACKNESS, a satire starring Ben Kingsley as a psychiatrist who trades therapy for marijuana, won the Audience Award for favorite U.S. drama as chosen by balloting among Sundance movie-goers. The film is set in 1990s New York City during the mayoral reign of current Presidential candidate Rudolph Guiliani. Hilarity ensues when a troubled teenage drug dealer meets up with a drug-addled psychiatrist, then falls for the doctor's daughter.. The coming-of-age dramedy had been expected to be picked up for distribution, but so far has not. Perhaps this high profile win will bring more buyers to the table. The crowd-pleaser will certainly be making the Festival rounds in the coming months.

KING OF PONG

The international component of the Festival has certainly been primed for a higher profile in the past few years, with competition sections for World Cinema Drama and Documentaries added to the Festival's roster less than 3 years ago. What this has done has made canny filmmakers and sales agents wait for Sundance to premiere their films, when in the past they would have waited for festivals like Venice, Berlin, Toronto or Cannes to have their first public and industry showings. The World and International Premiere status of most of the international films in competition is just another illustration of how Sundance has become vital for both American and international exposure. KING OF PING PONG, a quirky coming-of-age story from Swedish filmmaker Jens Jonsson, earned both the Jury and Cinematography prizes in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition. The film, about about two at-odds brothers who uncover their family history over spring break, was produced by BOB Film Sweden, has been a boxoffice sleeper in its native country and screened at Sundance as an International Premiere.

MAN ON WIRE, by British director James Marsh, won CAPTAIN ABU RAEDthe World Cinema Jury and Audience Awards in the documentary category. The film is an entertaining look at the French aerial artist Phillipe Petit's daring (and illegal) 1974 wire-walk between the twin towers of the World Trade Center. His prosecution in the US court reflected the absurdities and blindness of the US judicial system, while also prophetically anticipating the iconic status of the Twin Towers as a symbol of US power and vulnerability. The film was produced by the UK Film Council and had its world premiere at the Festival.

CAPTAIN ABU RAED, the first feature film produced in over 50 years in Jordan, won the World Cinema Audience Award. In this heartbreaking story, an old airport janitor who has always yearned of seeing the world but has never been able to afford to travel. One day a group of children in his poor neighborhood assume he is a pilot and beg him to share stories of the world outside of Amman, Jordan. Through imaginary tales a friendship forms and he finds the grim realities of the children's home life. He takes it upon himself to make a difference.

FIELDS OF FUEL, a cautionary wake-up call from activist -filmmaker Josh Tickell about the repercussions of America's dependence on foreign oil, earned the US Audience Award for Documentaries. The film, which has taken over 10 years to produce, tells the story of biodiesel, an alternative fuel for diesel engines. Made from vegetable oil, it is non-toxic, has low carbon dioxide emissions and can ultimately replace all liquid fuels used in the United States, thus freeing America's dependence on oil needed for gasoline. With oil selling for over $100 a barrel on world markets, this film is both timely and necessary.

William H. Macy hosted the awards ceremony Saturday night, opening with an off-color monologue that incorporated the titles of many films at the fest, from DOWNLOADING NANCY to FLOW: FOR LOVE OF WATER. This year, Sundance hosted a diverse group of professionals for the various juries. The U.S. dramatic jury, which included Marcia Gay Harden, Diego Luna and Sandra Oh, presented a Special Jury Prize for work by an ensemble cast to CHOKE, an adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's novel, which featured award-worthy performances by Sam Rockwell and Anjelica Huston. Other jury members included: Documentary Competition: Michelle Byrd, Heidi Ewing, Eugene Jarecki, Steven Okazaki and Annie Sundberg; World Dramatic Competition: Shunji Iwai (Japan), Lucrecia Martel (Argentina) and Jan Schütte (Germany); World Documentary Competition: Amir Bar-Lev (US), Leena Pasanen (Finland/Denmark) and Ilda Santiago (Brazil); American and International Shorts: Jon Bloom, Melonie Diaz and Jason Reitman; and The Alfred P. Sloan Prize: Alan Alda, Michael Polish, Evan Schwartz, Benedict Schwegler and John Underkoffler.

Other 2008 Sundance Film Festival Awards incuded:
Directing, U.S. drama: Lance Hammer, BALLAST
Directing, U.S. documentary: Nanette Burstein, AMERICAN TEEN
Cinematography, U.S. drama: Lol Crawley, BALLAST'
Editing, U.S. documentary: Joe Bini, `ROMAN POLANSKI: WANTED AND DESIRED
Special jury prize for singularity of vision, U.S. drama: Chusy Haney-Jardine, ANYWHERE, USA
Special jury prize, world cinema dramatic competition: BLUE EYELIDS (Ernesto Contreras)
Special jury prize, world cinema documentary competition: GREATEST SILENCE: RAPE IN THE CONGO (Lisa F. Jackson)
For a complete list of winners, film clips and footage from the Awards Ceremony, visit the Sundance Film Festival site: http://www.sundance.org
Sandy Mandelberger, North American Editor

BERLIN- NEWS

Berlinale 2008: Seven young German and French film fans will award the independentprize “Dialogue en perspective”
http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4251.html

Berlinale Camera for Karlheinz Böhm and Otto SanderSince 1986, the Berlin International Film Festival has presented the BerlinaleCamera to film personalities or institutions to which it feels particularly indebtedand wishes to express its thanks with this award.

http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4246.html

Special Berlinale Series to Mark the 40th Anniversary of Berlin’s Vietnam Congress: “War at Home” – The Vietnam War in U.S. Cinema
http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4143.html


Film and video experiments, exhibitions and performances: Forum expanded continues to probe the boundaries of cinema

http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4133.html

Berlinale Co-Production Market: “Books at Berlinale” – Film Rights for Ten International Book Titles
http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4187.html

The Special Screenings of the 38th Forum: extraordinary documents, cinematic excavations, and intoxicating film
http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4177.html


Berlinale 2008: Prize for Best First Feature Award
http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4209.html

Stories Written by Life & Success Stories from Former Campus Talents - Berlinale Talent Campus #6, February 9 – 14, 2008
http://www.berlinale.de/en/presse/pressemitteilungen/alle/Alle-Detail_4201.html

Thursday, January 24, 2008

10th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival

Images of the 21st Century
March 7 – 16, 2008


The 10th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival – Images of the 21st Century celebrates its 10th anniversary this year. Organized by the Thessaloniki International Film Festival, the 10th TDF will present roughly 200 documentaries in the event’s flagship OLYMPION and PAVLOS ZANNAS theatres at the festival headquarters in Aristotelous Square, as well as the JOHN CASSAVETES, STAVROS TORNES, FRIDA LIAPPA and TONIA MARKETAKI theatres located at the Thessaloniki harbour, within walking distance from the Festival headquarters and the International Doc Market.

The main sections of the event are:

• Views of the World: dealing with subjects of social interest.
• Portraits-Human Journeys: the human being as the focus of the narrative.
• Stories to Tell: brief stories of human interest that stand out both for the nature of their subject and the way it has been dealt with.
• Recordings of Memory: Events and people who played a significant role in shaping contemporary life; the testimonies of a living history.
• Habitat: environmental issues and their social context.
• Music: late night screenings of musical documentaries.
• Greek Panorama: a selection from the latest local documentary productions.
• Focus On Asia: the Asian documentaries section was added to the festival program last year as a way to introduce and promote documentaries from Japan, the Philippines, Thailand, China and other Asian countries to European audiences.
• Human Rights: films that shed light and raise questions on vital human rights issues such as freedom of speech and the right to different political and religious convictions.

10TH TDF PREMIERES

Among the approximately 200 films that constitute this year’s program, the 10th TDF is proud to present the following premieres:

Culture 68, directed by Simon Brook (USA/UK).
Renowned documentarian Simon Brooks is commemorating the incendiary May 1968 events, 30 years after their revolutionary role in history. The film recounts stories from people such as theatre director Peter Brooks (Simon’s father), Milos Forman, William Klein, Dennis Hopper, Vaclav Havel and many others (World premiere).

Love and Sex in China, directed by Annamaria Gallone (Italy).
Yang Li Na, a young Chinese woman going through a marital crisis, wanders through the streets of Beijing questioning not only the evolution and problems of her own relationship, but those of her rapidly-changing country (World premiere).

To Live - Save Ours Saemankum directed by Kang-gil Lee (Korea).
This is the story of the sea people of Gyehwa Island in Korea and the controversial Saemankum Reclamation Project, implemented for the purposes of augmentation of agricultural areas and extension of industrial estates. The documentary tracks the changes brought by the project, affecting the ones whose livelihood comes from working in the sea (International Premiere).

The Potter from Binis, directed by Cosmin Tiglar (Romania).
Ionica Stepan is 80 years old and part of the seventh generation of pottery craftsmen in Binis, a Romanian village from the Banat region. Stepan is the last craftsman of a tradition that is almost disappearing in the 21st century (International Premiere).

Citizen Nawai by Nissim Mossek (Israel).
Director Nissim Mossek dedicated five years to the story of Israeli political and social activist Ezra Nawi. The film tracks Nawi’s extraordinary efforts to protect Palestinian villagers and farmers from the armed forces and the three-year relationship between Ezra and his Palestinian partner, Fuad Mussa, who, because of his homosexuality, is caught in a never-ending cycle in and out of prison (International Premiere).

As Seen Through These Eyes by Hilary Helstein (USA).
Narrated by the poet Maya Angelou, this documentary tells the story of many-a “defiant witnesses", the people who had the courage to express themselves through art inside the Nazi concentration camps and during the WW II years (European Premiere).

10TH TDF ROUNDTABLES - DISCUSSIONS

Various discussions and roundtables will take place during the 10th TDF, with the participation of Greek and foreign panellists from the film industry, the press and various organizations. The discussions will focus on the documentary genre itself, but also on contemporary significant social and political issues. The following have been confirmed so far:

Faces of Fascism – A discussion will accompany this thematic Spotlight, showcasing films that deal with the various contemporary manifestations of fascism and taking Kristallnacht, the first pogrom against the Jews on November 9, 1938, as its departure point.

Approaching Nature – At an urgent time in the life of the planet Earth, the 10th TDF responds by organizing film screenings and a roundtable that contends with the current situation of our ecosystem, thus illustrating the problems and proposing solutions.

Among the numerous parallel events are:

THE INTERNATIONAL DOC MARKET
The International Doc Market, introduced in 1999, will be held this year from March 10-15 featuring over 450 titles. The market, organized in cooperation with the Greek National Television (ERT S.A.) and with the support of Media Program of the European Union, caters to the needs of Television networks from European countries while it has already proved to be a useful tool for a wide range of professionals from other parts of the world.

Approximately 50 buyers will be attending from Europe, the US and Canada, such as Jan Rofekamp (Films Transit - Canada), Nicolas Deschamps (Arte France), Treska Hilmi (03 Productions – Dubai) and Anne Grolleron (Histoire - France), to name a few.
There will be 30 fully equipped viewing booths available to prospective buyers for private viewing of the Market Videotheque films. For the first time the Doc Market will be housed in the 1st floor of the Electra Palace Hotel at Aristotelous Sq and next to the Festival headquarters, providing a much larger and better-equipped space to all its participants.

THE PITCHING FORUM
The Pitching Forum (March 12-16), running since 2001 in collaboration with the European Documentary Network (EDN), gives local and foreign audiovisual professionals the opportunity to have their projects pitched to commissioning editors and representatives of the international audiovisual media. 21 projects will be presented in Docs in Salonica – Pitching Forum 2008.

Monday, January 21, 2008

BERLIN- Generation Programme Complete

The selection for Generation – the Berlinale section for children and youth- has been finalised. 24 feature and 31 short films from 20 countries will be screening this year. This includes eight world and seven international feature film premieres.

The competition Generation Kplus will open on February 8 at the Zoo Palast with theDutch film Waar is het Paard van Sinterklaas? Director Mischa Kamp already captivated audiences with her first film about the Chinese-Dutch girl Winky at the Berlinale 2006.

Compelling genre films will join the arthouse productions already selected for Generation Kplus. A French adaptation of the legendary comics series Lucky Luke will screen at the Zoo Palast to old and new fans of the timeless Western: TOUS AL’OUEST, Une aventure de Lucky Luke. Shochiku, a Japanese company with a long tradition, will be showing its adaptation of a comic with Kung Fu Kun which is about a Shaolin monk who, though only a small child, is already a powerful kicker.

Generation 14plus will open on February 8 with the Australian film The Black Balloon by Elissa Down. This world premiere starring Toni Collette, Rhys Wakefield, Luke Ford and supermodel Gemma Ward will kick off a strong competition of 14 feature films.

For the first time two documentaries will also be competing in the Generation 14plus programme: love, peace & beatbox by Volker Meyer-Dabisch takes a rhythmic and atmospheric look at a form of Berlin subculture, human beatboxing. And in War Child, director Christian Karim Chrobog accompanies hip-hop star Emmanuel Jal on a journey into his past as a child soldier in Sudan. Jal himself will present the film in Berlin.

In the world premiere of the zany road movie Dunya & Desie, Eva van de Wijdeven and Maryam Hassouni (Netherlands’ Shooting Star 2008) set out on a trip through the chaos of a generation caught between cultures.

Somers Town, a new film by Shane Meadows (This is England), has also been selected. The director has again joined forces with actor Thomas Turgoose, who was in Meadows’ last film, to make this black-and-white study of a milieu in London.

The DVD edition Berlinale Generation is releasing two new titles for the Festival: Schickt mehr Süßes (Send More Candy) and Der Italiener (An Italian) were past audience favourites. They will go on sale in February.

BERLIN- World-spanning young cinema

World-spanning young cinema: The programme of the 38th Forum comprises films from 33 countries, including 32 world and international premieres

The 38th Forum of the Berlinale is showing a truly world-spanning and diverse programme with films from 33 countries and all continents. One emphasis again this year is the experimental, unconventional, imaginative work of young filmmakers; the programme presents a total of 16 directorial debuts. A conspicuous number of films adopt the perspective of children and young people – in a world where often there is no more childhood.

The Mexican film La frontera infinita (The Infinite Border) by Juan Manuel Sepúlveda tells of the uninterrupted stream of migrants from Central America to the United States; in the Irish production Seaview by Paul Rowley and Nicky Gogan, migrants have reached their goal, Europe, but find themselves captured in a no-man’s land, the former vacation facility Mosney, north of Dublin, where they often wait years for their asylum hearings. But childhood cannot be postponed to a vague future, and so these films’ most poignant moments are images of children.

The Australian film Son of a Lion by Benjamin Gilmour is set in Pakistan and focuses on a boy who wants to escape a world characterized by armed violence and archaic traditions. An interesting companion piece to this film is the German directing debut of Brigitte Bertele, Nacht vor Augen (Night Before Eyes), in which a German soldier returning from Afghanistan takes out his combat trauma on his little brother.

The central characters of the programme’s three Philippine films are children and young people. The elegant parable of the metropolis, Tirador (Slingshot) by Brillante Ma. Mendoza, and the deceptive rural idyll of Mes De Guzman’s Balikbayan Box both focus on daily survival by one’s wits, in which the young often have the advantage over the old. By contrast, in Jim Libiran’s directing debut Tribu (Tribe) a gripping feature film about gangs in Tondo, a poor quarter in Manila, the gang culture is a self-organized substitute for family, far more authoritarian than the crumbling traditional family structures.

In the Ugandan hip-hop film Divizionz by the filmmaking collective Yes! That’s Us, the protagonists also play themselves. In the slums of Kampala, they live from deals and fortunate coincidences, favors and extortion. Even the seemingly innocent dream of success as a musician has long since been corrupted by the hard conditions of thestruggle for survival.

The French debut Regarde-moi (Ain’t Scared) of Audrey Estrougo shows how even the youth subculture in the suburbs of Paris is imprisoned in conventions. The film tells the same story of 24 hours in a city twice in succession, first from a male and then from a female perspective, thereby evoking an atmosphere of social constriction that leaves no room for the individual. In his 27th film, Le premier venu (Just Anybody), French film auteur Jacques Doillon follows his young protagonist in provincial northwestern France. In her love affair with the first man to come along, she seeks an intensity that her bourgeois home denies her.

Japan is also strongly represented in this year’s programme. Kumasaka Izuru’s directorial debut, Asyl – Park and Love Hotel, discovers a peculiar big city oasis on the roof of a by-the-hour hotel in Tokyo. The directors Hirosue Hiromasa and Takahashi Izumi have a close creative tie; their respective films Higurashi and Musunde-hiraite (What the Heart Craves) are sensitively and subtly devoted to dysfunctional love and family relationships.

On the occasion of the international premiere of his impressive three-hour feature film on the Japanese terrorist group United Red Army, a tribute is paid to maverick director Wakamatsu Koji by three “pinku eiga”. Along with Secrets Behind the Wall, with which the director caused quite a stir in the 1965 Berlinale Competition, the Forum is also showing the classics Go, Go Second Time Virgin (1969) and Ecstasy of the Angels (1972).

The 38th Forum of the Berlinale is showing 36 films in its main programme, joined by the three-film “Tribute to Wakamatsu Koji”. In addition, the section is showing several Special Screenings to be announced soon.

Films in the main programme of the Forum 2008

Asyl - Park and Love Hotel (Asyl) by Kumasaka Izuru, Japan
Balikbayan Box by Mes De Guzman, Philippines/Netherlands/Switzerland (IP)
Be Like Others by Tanaz Eshaghian, USA/Canada/Iran (IP)
El Camino (The Path) by Ishtar Yasin Gutiérrez, Costa Rica/France (WP)
Corridor #8 by Boris Despodov, Bulgaria (WP)
Corroboree by Ben Hackworth, Australia
Diorthosi (Correction) by Thanos Anastopoulos, Greece (IP)
Divizionz by Yes! That’s Us, Uganda/South Africa
Flipping out by Yoav Shamir, Israel/Canada (IP)
La frontera infinita (The Infinite Border) by Juan Manuel Sepúlveda, Mexico (IP)
God Man Dog by Singing Chen, Taiwan
Grandmother’s Flower by Mun Jeong-hyun, Republic of Korea (IP)
Green Porno by Isabella Rossellini, Jody Shapiro, USA (IP)
Higurashi by Hirosue Hiromasa, Japan
Invisible City by Tan Pin Pin, Singapore
Leo by Josef Fares, Sweden (IP)
Loos ornamental by Heinz Emigholz, Austria/Germany (WP)
Mafrouza/Coeur (Mafrouza/Heart) by Emmanuelle Demoris, France/Egypt (IP)
Musunde-hiraite (What the Heart Craves) by Takahashi Izumi, Japan (IP)
My Winnipeg by Guy Maddin, Canada (IP)
Nacht vor Augen (Night Before Eyes) by Brigitte Bertele, Germany (WP)
Nirvana by Igor Voloshin, Russian Federation (WP)
Paruthiveeran by Ameer Sulthan, India (IP)
Le premier venu (Just Anybody) by Jacques Doillon, France/Belgium (WP)
Regarde-moi (Ain’t Scared) by Audrey Estrougo, France (IP)
Seaview by Paul Rowley, Nicky Gogan, Ireland (IP)
Shahida – Brides of Allah (Brides of Allah) by Natalie Assouline, Israel (WP)
Son of a Lion by Benjamin Gilmour, Australia/Pakistan
South Main by Kelly Parker, USA (WP)
Sweet Food City by Gao Wendong, People’s Republic of China (WP)
Tatil Kitabi (Summer Book) by Seyfi Teoman, Turkey (WP)
La terramadre (Motherland) by Nello La Marca, Italy (WP)
Tirador (Slingshot) by Brillante Ma. Mendoza, Philippines
Tribu by Jim Libiran, PhilippinesUnited
Red Army by Wakamatsu Koji, Japan (IP)
Victoire Terminus, Kinshasa by Florent de la Tullaye, Renaud Barret, France/Democratic Republic of the Congo (WP)
Yasukuni by Li Ying, Japan/People’s Republic of China

Tribute to Wakamatsu Koji: Ecstasy of the Angels, Japan 1972; Go, Go Second Time Virgin, Japan 1969; Secrets Behind the Wall, Japan 1965

BERLIN- NEWS

EFM Industry Debates 2008 – Drive Your Business Into The Future

The European Film Market (EFM) and its official main partner and sponsor ArtsAlliance Media (AAM), are presenting the EFM Industry Debates. Building on thesuccess of last year’s collaboration, this year’s debates will deal with theopportunities and challenges of digital film distribution and sales. Under theheading “Embrace Digital Distribution: Drive Your Business Into The Future”,advances in digital distribution possibilities, prospects of the cinema market andthe effects of growing digitalisation on home users will be discussed from February8 to 10, 2008.

On three afternoons the EFM Industry Debates will explore topics related to thefields of “Digital Cinema” and “Digital Home”. With this series, the EFM and AAM arestriving to stay abreast of the latest changes affecting film distribution as wellas investigate technical advances for their market compatibility. The first debatewill examine the perspectives opening up for European independent distributors inview of increasing digitalisation. On the second day, the key issue will bedevelopments in the home entertainment market: discussion will revolve around thechances emerging for filmmakers and distributors as a result of online distributionand legal downloading options. The series will close with a panel on the outlook oftechnical innovations and the development of digital standards for onlinedistribution.

The London-based company Arts Alliance Media is Europe’s leading provider for thedigital distribution of film and is currently working on establishing aEuropean-wide digital network that will make films available to cinemas and homeentertainment as well as enable exchange between partners in the industry.

Participating in the EFM Industry Debates 2008 are experts from different areas ofthe entertainment industry, leading market analysts and specialised journalists.This year they include: Arash Amel (Screen Digest), Robert Andrews (PaidContent:UK), Liesl Copland (Netflix), John Dick (MEDIA Programme), Anders Geersten (EuropeanDigital Cinema Forum), Michael Gubbins (Screen International), Simon Morris(Lovefilm.com), Jon Salmon (Tiscali), and Nick Varley (Park Circus).

The EFM Industry Debates 2008 will be held in the ballroom of the Marriott Hotelfrom 17:00 – 18:00 (5 - 6 pm). Debates will cover the following topics:

Friday, February 8:“Digital Cinema – The Independent Distributor’s Perspective”Saturday,

February 9:“Digital Home – Online Distribution/ Driving Business”Sunday,

February 10:“Digital Home – Online Distribution/ The Technology”

Admission to the EFM Industry Debates is free for accredited Festival visitors andEFM participants. Guests can register to attend at:
http://www.efm-industrydebates.com