Announcements
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New Book: Cannes Festival |
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Our Swiss colleague Christian Jungen has published his book on the Cannes
Congratulations, Christian! Dina |
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Last Updated ( Friday, 13 March 2009 14:06 )
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Check out the forthcoming conferences (SCMS and NECS) and the relevant panels and workshops hosted by our colleagues regarding film distribution and film industries.
2009 SOCIETY FOR CINEMA AND MEDIA STUDIES CONFERENCE
Josai University / Josai International University
Tokyo, Japan
May 21-24, 2009
Friday, May 22, 2009 1:15-3:00 pm
G13: Workshop: The Art and Politics of Film Festival Programming
Room: 505AB
Chair: Liz Czach (University of Alberta)
Workshop Participants:
B. Ruby Rich (University of California, Santa Cruz)
Kay Armatage (University of Toronto)
Patricia Zimmermann (Ithaca College)
Liz Czach (University of Alberta)
Diane Burgess (Simon Fraser University)
Friday, May 22, 2009 3:15-5:00 pm
H1: Asian-Pacific Cinemas: Distribution and Reception
Room: 301A
Chair: Ruby Cheung (University of St Andrews)
Yun Mi Hwang (University of St Andrews), "Contested History and Reception of East Asian Martial Arts Epics"
Ruby Cheung (University of St Andrews), "From The Warlords to Red Cliff: The Politics of Film Promotion in the Asia-Pacific and the Diasporic Chinese Online Fandom"
Daniel Martin (Queen's University Belfast), "Hype, Censorship and Critical Controversy: Kim Ki-duk in the UK"
Mary Ainslie (Manchester Metropolitan University), "Post-war Thai Cinema: A ‘Traditional' Art Form of Colonialism"
Sponsor: Asian/Pacific American Caucus
Sunday, May 24, 2009 10:00-11:45am
N2: Workshop: Researching International Film Industries
Room: 301B
Chair: Paul McDonald (University of Portsmouth)
Workshop Participants:
Philip Drake (University of Stirling)
Tamara Falicov (University of Kansas)
Nitin Govil (University of California, San Diego)
Olof Hedling (Lund University/Växjö University)
Alejandro Pardo (University of Navarra)
NECS 2009 CONFERENCE ‘LOCATING MEDIA'
Lund University
Lund
June 25-28
In June 2009 the European Network for Cinema and Media Studies will be hosting its third annual conference. As part of the network the Film Industries Work Group will be presenting two pre-constituted panels. Please see below for dates, times, and details of the papers. For further information about the Film Industries Work Group, register with NECS at http://www.necs-initiative.org and choose the ‘Work Groups' link or otherwise contact Paul McDonald (
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).
PANEL 1: Historical Developments in European Film Industries
09.00-11.00 Friday 26th June 2009
‘We Had to be Careful: Self Censorship and Self Regulation Strategies Used by Nordisk Films Kompagni to Oblige Requirements in Different Territories'
Isak Thorsen (University of Copenhagen)
‘In the Search for Business: Early Glocalizing Practices in the Spanish Film Industry of the 1930s and 1940s'
Valeria Camporesi (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid)
‘The Czechoslovak Co-productions with the ‘West': From Governmental Orders of the 1950s to Selling the ‘New Wave' Art Cinema in the 1960s'
Pavel Skopal (Masaryk University)
PANEL 2: Perspectives on Film Production
11.15-13.15 Friday 26th June 2009
‘The Time of Production'
Patrick Vonderau (Ruhr University Bochum)
‘Selling Crime: On the Contemporary Crime Film Serial in Scandinavia'
Olof Hedling (Växjö University and Lund University)
‘The Difficult Take-Off for Film Studios in Spain: The Case of La Ciudad de la Luz'
Alejandro Pardo (University of Navarra)
‘Film Studios as Cultural Intermediaries: Post-1989 American Film Production in Prague'
Petr Szczepanik (Masaryk University)
‘Production Facilities in the Contemporary Turkish Cinema Industry'
Melis Behlil (Kadir Has University) |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 17 March 2009 19:39 )
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Mark Cousins, Tilda Swinton and their Film Festival in China |
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Dear all,
Mark Cousins has sent in this personal report on the film festival he and Tilda Swinton are organising in China this month, and I thought we will also run it for your interest. Mark has asked me to acknowledge explicitly the financial assistance received from Edinburgh University for this project.
Click here to read Mark's piece: storyline.doc
Enjoy: Dina
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Last Updated ( Friday, 13 March 2009 13:09 )
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Our team member Dr Ragan Rhyne is currently on maternity leave. She will be back to the office in September 2009. During Ragan's absence, her job will be taken up by Mr. Thomas Gerstenmeyer who will come on board starting 19 March 2009. Ms. Serazer Pekerman has newly joined our team to give us administrative support.
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Last Updated ( Friday, 13 March 2009 13:11 )
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Press Coverage
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Special Festival Issue of Film International |
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Parviz Jahed of Radio Zamaneh has published a review of the Special Festival Issue of Film International (Vol.6.No4/2008), edited by Dina Iordanova on 10th October 2008. The original Farsi text of the review can be accessed here:
http://radiozamaaneh.com/jahed/2008/10/post_325.html
Parviz Jahed was so kind to also send us a translation of his review:
Film International is a bi-monthly film journal with a theoretical approach to film studies which is published in Britain. The journal covers all aspects of film culture in a visually dynamic way and in every issue it deals with a specific film and culture related subject.
It is different to Film International, published in Iran which is a quarterly magazine that only deals with factual and subjective issues within the film industry and focuses much more on Iranian National cinema.
This special issue of Film International which features the guest editor Dina Iordanova is dedicated to Film Festivals.
In recent years, studies about film festival has been taken very seriously and has become highly developed academically.
Contemporary media theoretician and film historian Thomas Elsaesser in his remarkable essay on the nature of film festivals which was published in 2005, acknowledges that film festivals are the European industry response to the mechanism of the Hollywood film distribution.
In her introduction Dina writes:
" Over the past twenty years festivals have proliferated all over the world. It is nearly impossible to provide an exact figure for the number of festivals in operation, but it is clear that it is well over 1,000 and more likely around 2,000. France alone has over 350 film festivals, approximately one for each day of the year."
According to Professor Iordanova, in this collection of articles it has been attempted to answer the following questions:
What has been the effect of International network of festivals on the film industry?
How the hierarchical system of film festivals (which in Elsaesser's view is highly porous and perforated), affects on the complex dynamism of the world's cinematic culture?
How are film festivals placed in the International film production and distribution structure?
Do the film festivals have a vital role in the world film industry and why this is, or not so?
All of these essays focused on the international dynamic aspects of the film festival phenomenon.
The contributors to this issue have looked at the film festival phenomenon from different angles and perspectives.
Some of them concentrated on the concrete aspects and objective roles and impacts of film festivals and the others examined them in the context of art management and cultural policy making. Julian Stringer, who teaches film studies at the Nottingham University in his article, 'Genre Films and Festival Communities', historically reviewed the mystery and thriller film festival which took place annually in Nottingham from 1991 until 2000.
Soo Jeong Ahn in her article particularly focused on programming of Korean films at the Pusan International Film Festival whereas Peter Stanfield, Reader in Film Studies at the University of Kent, surveyed the history of Edinburgh International Film Festival from 1969 till 1977.
This issue of Film International by putting together of these different approaches and insights, aims to investigate the new wave of cultural and intellectual research into film festival.
Film International is published with the price of £3 by Intellect Publications. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 09 March 2009 14:42 )
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Dina Iordanova on the Wide Reach of Indian Cinema |
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A news article entitled 'Awaara to AR Rahman, Bollywood on upswing in west: UK expert' featuring Dina Iordanova's opinion on the achievement of Indian cinema is reproduced across hundreds of Indian media outlets today.
Click here to read the news report. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 09 March 2009 13:44 )
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Michael Guillen, comment on "Film International Special Issue on Film Festivals (Vol. 6, Issue 4)," The Evening Class Blog, comment posted October 28, 2008.
Regular readers of The Evening Class are, no doubt, aware at this point that I am an affirmed film festival junkie. I credit this addiction to the influence of Michael Hawley who introduced me to the San Francisco International some 12 years ago. I had been attending Frameline and some genre festivals; but, with the San Francisco International, I was hooked! When I began The Evening Class a few years back it was an online literary reaction to my increasing involvement with film festivals in the San Francisco Bay Area, with infrequent sojourns to festivals out of state. I had become intrigued with what I have often termed "the sociality of film culture"; a term that keeps adapting even as my own experience of film festival culture keeps adapting. Certainly, watching films within a film festival venue is a distinct experience from watching films in their theatrical distribution. For starters, the audiences are different. I would even go so far as to say that the latter filmviewing experience (and its attendant audience) has become increasingly less attractive to me as time goes on and there are many reasons for that, which I hope to explore in due course. Where there has been much focus on the formal qualities of film production and the evolving nature of film criticism, in my opinion not enough attention has been paid to reception studies and the sociocultural dimensions of global cinema as reflected through film festival culture, in contrast-let's say-to the sociocultural dimension of online discourse about film studies, which lately has begun to remind me of a high school popularity contest.
With transnational aplomb, the current issue of Film International (Vol. 6, Issue 4) is a specially-themed issue on "Genre Films & Festival Communities" that seeks to redress that oversight. This issue has been indispensable in helping me articulate my continuing position within this cine-phenomenon. It's been one of the most impressive and serviceable film journals I've read in quite some time and I highly recommend it to anyone interested in film festival culture. Its most immediate reward has been exposure to the work of Dina Iordanova, guest editor for this particular issue. Dina Iordanova is Professor in Film Studies and Director of the Centre for Film Studies at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Her research approaches cinema on a meta-national level and focuses on the dynamics of transnationalism in cinema; she has special interest in issues related to cinema at the periphery. She has published extensively on international and transnational film art and industry, including Budding Channels of Peripheral Cinema: The Long Tail of Global Film Circulation and (most recently) New Bulgarian Cinema (both published by College Gate Press and beautifully produced by PoD provider Blurb). Dina Iordanova's blog DinaView likewise features erudite commentary on international films, directors, actors, and events.
In her editorial introduction to Film International 6:4, Iordanova has stressed how the proliferation of film festivals around the world necessitates a concentrated focus on the international dynamics of the festival phenomenon. She succinctly summarizes the key concerns of each of the essays contributed to the issue and frames the questions that run through the collection: "What is the impact of the worldwide festival network on the other elements of the global film industry? How does the festivals' hierarchical ... system impact on the complex dynamics of global cultural production and distribution? What is the place of festivals in the structure of international film distribution (and, increasingly, production)? What historical and technological conditions led to the current powerful positioning of festivals as fundamentally influential cinematic institutions? What is the role of festivals in the system of national, regional and worldwide cinematic culture? Can the international festival operation be economically rationalized? Are festivals indeed crucial yet underestimated links in the context of the global film industry?" Proposed answers to this initial set of questions essentially serve as springboards into further inquiries. By reviewing the history of the evolution of film festival culture, and by scrutinizing specific festivals while likewise addressing more general issues concerning the functioning of festivals at large, further questions arise about the role of festivals in the context of arts management and cultural policy and "a range of other issues, such as the specific temporal and spatial aspects of the festival circuit, the paradoxes and contradictions of the economic logic of festivals (straddled between the culture/commerce divide), the importance of film markets attached to festivals, the role of centralized festival regulation, the impact of new digital technologies, the complex festival synchronization across national and international frameworks and the professionalism of the film festival operation." (Film International 6:4, pp. 4-5.) In the weeks to come, I intend to pepper entries here at The Evening Class with insights gleaned from the diverse approaches represented in the current Film International issue.
For starters, I glance at the epidemic hazard of an oversaturation of film festivals in the Bay Area alone. In October, as helpfully detailed by Brian Darr at Hell on Frisco Bay, there have been 12 film festivals, many dovetailing if not downright overlapping each other. Though one would like to perceive this as an embarrassment of riches, more truthfully it feels-as Brian described it-"crammed" and "at least eleven too many for one cinephile to attend" or to "write about with much care and detail." Brian did his best and my approach was to leapfrog festivals to do justice to those I landed on. I received frequent, nearly frantic, emails from such festivals as the United Nations Association Film Festival and the International Documentary Film Festival requesting coverage. Though I have never had to before, this year I chose to guiltily ignore some of these requests, and consciously not attend some of the festivals, in order to provide decent coverage to the rest. As Sergei Mesonero Burgos writes in his essay "A Festival Epidemic in Spain": "Of what use are film festivals? If the abundance of something were related to its necessity ... we would venture to say that they have become increasingly indispensable. But, for what? And for whom?"
I chose to focus on the second edition of Dead Channels, the inaugural line-up of French Cinema Now and the Arab Film Festival. Despite some very good programming on the part of Bruce Fletcher, Dead Channels was not as well-attended as it should have been for the amount of excellent press it received from nearly every media outlet in the Bay Area. As Burgos has further written: "Is there enough audience to sustain all this abundance of events? Assuming that the answer is positive, this still does not mean that the audience will always be there." (Film International 6:4, p. 13.) Contributing to the dilemma is that some of the entries in Dead Channels-Let the Right One In and Surveillance, to name two-were likewise on the lineup at the Mill Valley Film Festival. To minimize this maddening overlap, as a film writer I specifically avoided mentioning Mill Valley, much like I avoided mentioning the midnight series at the San Francisco International Documentary Film Festival, which-like Dead Channels-revived Tokyo Gore Police, a film that-to worry the bone-had already played at earlier film festivals in San Francisco. Overlapping dates, overlapping line-ups, repeated programming, have contributed to what Salvadore Llopart has termed "a true feeling of anarchy and chaos" and which Burgos warns "has helped undermine the traditional consideration that film festivals once received by the critics, the public, and the industry." (Supra, p. 12.)
The capacity crowds at French Cinema Now, however (except for the noticeably unpopular and underattended Lads and Jockeys) made me question exactly what had happened at Dead Channels? Fundamentally, I believe it's a genre problem (and possibly a venue problem). With the increasing digital access to genre films (you can buy certain foreign-region titles through Twitch before they've even reached American soil), genre-specific film festivals are being cut off at the knees, especially when they're competing with films that have no digital distribution or ready exposure. As someone who loves genre films and someone who finds little delight in the social deficit of being banished to home entertainment, this is a troubling development. There was a time when you would go to a genre festival to see films you'd never see at your local multiplex. And Bruce Fletcher deserves high marks for not charging filmmakers submission fees and for programming entries such as Karla Jean Davis' Golgotha and Jimmy Creamer's Reality Bleed-through, which—honestly—might never see a theatrical screening anywhere else without Fletcher's visionary generosity. In the realm of genre film festivals especially—along with festivals oriented towards representation of minorities long assimilated into the larger culture (I'm thinking of the problems being faced by Frameline)—new strategies must be devised if these festivals are to survive.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 02 March 2009 21:25 )
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Announcements
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International Film Guide 2009 |
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International Film Guide 2009 (45th edn), ed. by Ian Haydn Smith, Wallflower Press 2009
Dina Iordanova recently contributed a survey chapter on the film industries across the New Europe to the International Film Guide 2009.
Now in its 45th edition, the 450-page reference book enjoys an unrivalled reputation as the most authoritative and trusted source of information on contemporary world cinema since its inaugural issue in 1963. The current edition includes detailed breakdowns of international box office statistics and film festival award-winners, plus detailed listings and descriptions of more than 120 international film festivals. The International Film Guide was launched at the Berlin International Film Festival and European Film Market on Monday, 9 February 2009, in collaboration with the Frankfurt Book Fair.

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 27 October 2010 14:40 )
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Events
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International Film Festival Workshop
Presented by Centre for Film Studies at the University of St Andrews
4 April 2009, 10:00-17:00, University of St Andrews
This one-day, intensive workshop of Dynamics of World Cinema, to be hosted by the Centre for Film Studies at the University of St. Andrews, will bring together select scholars researching film festivals and related topics. The workshop will be focused around broadly defined methodological and theoretical concerns related to the study of film festivals and will provide a rare opportunity for productive conversation about the state of the field and current research agendas. Sessions will include both moderated roundtable discussions as well as prepared presentations, allowing participants to present research at various stages of completion. Topics will include festival programming, distribution, funding, digitization/new media, cultural policy, and case studies of specific festivals.
Workshop participants include: Irene Bignardi (Filmitalia), Ruby Cheung (University of St Andrews), Stuart Cunningham (Queensland University of Technology), Lindiwe Dovey (SOAS, University of London), Michael Gubbins (Screen International), Janet Harbord (Goldsmiths College, University of London), Dina Iordanova (University of St Andrews), Skadi Loist (University of Hamburg), Lucy Mazdon (University of Southampton), Richard Porton (Cineaste Magazine), Nick Roddick (Split Screen), David Slocum (The Berlin School of Creative Leadership), Núria Triana Toribio (University of Manchester), and Marijke de Valck (University of Amsterdam).
The workshop is being organized as part of 'Dynamics of World Cinema: Transnational Channels of Global Film Distribution', a Leverhulme-sponsored two-and-a-half-year project on global networks of film distribution. Directed by Professor Dina Iordanova of the University of St Andrews, the project examines four main networks of international film circulation: mainstream distribution of international blockbusters from around the world, the film festival circuit, film circulation amongst diasporic communities, and Internet-enabled transnational film dissemination.
The Workshop will be held at the Byre Theatre, Abbey Street, St. Andrews, Fife. The workshop is free of charge, but space is limited and an RSVP is required. For more information, please contact
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or
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.
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 05 April 2009 18:37 )
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