Participants to receive $10,000 in services, and mentorship.
The Independent Filmmaker Project (Ifp) has announced the 10 projects selected for the third annual Screen Forward Labs running in New York from April 24-28.
The Ifp’s year-long fellowship for content creators with serialised projects provides participants with $10,000 worth of services and a comprehensive mentorship to bring their projects to fruition.
The Screen Forward Labs will culminate with all projects pitching to investors, distributors, tech companies and network executives at Ifp Film Week 2017.
The 2017 Screen Forward Episodic Lab fellows are: Aeris by creator, director and producer Lukas Huffman, co-producer Amy Zhang and executive producer Shin Campos; Anamnesis by co-creators, directors, writers, producers and editors Alex Calleros and Michael Tucker, producer Ryan McDuffie and executive producers Jeremy Norris and Patrick Norris; Angry Black Women from creators, writers and executive producers Dahéli Hall and HaJ and director Angie Browne; and Camp Abercorn by creator, director, writer and producer...
The Independent Filmmaker Project (Ifp) has announced the 10 projects selected for the third annual Screen Forward Labs running in New York from April 24-28.
The Ifp’s year-long fellowship for content creators with serialised projects provides participants with $10,000 worth of services and a comprehensive mentorship to bring their projects to fruition.
The Screen Forward Labs will culminate with all projects pitching to investors, distributors, tech companies and network executives at Ifp Film Week 2017.
The 2017 Screen Forward Episodic Lab fellows are: Aeris by creator, director and producer Lukas Huffman, co-producer Amy Zhang and executive producer Shin Campos; Anamnesis by co-creators, directors, writers, producers and editors Alex Calleros and Michael Tucker, producer Ryan McDuffie and executive producers Jeremy Norris and Patrick Norris; Angry Black Women from creators, writers and executive producers Dahéli Hall and HaJ and director Angie Browne; and Camp Abercorn by creator, director, writer and producer...
- 4/24/2017
- ScreenDaily
If you're a fan of Stanley Kubrick's The Shining, I've got a must-watch video essay on the film that focuses on the script. It's called "Quietly Going Insane Together," and it was created by Ryan McDuffie of Lessons from the Screenplay. The video is packed full of all kinds of fascinating insight into Kubrick's method of madness and what made this psychological horror film so damn terrifying and awesome. If you are interested in the moviemaking process or screenwriting, this is definitely something you've got to watch.
- 11/23/2016
- by Joey Paur
- GeekTyrant
Come January, when MovieMaker launches its new site, we'll be doing a monthly update with NewFilmmakers Los Angeles where we look at the slate of films and filmmakers they bring to the screen at Sunset Gower Studios. In the meantime, here's a look back at the August offerings. Below you'll find links to interviews with Alex Calleros (Anamnesis), Ryan McDuffie (Forest Falls), Tyler Gillett (Funny In Love), Paul Young (The Glowing Hours), Michael Tucker (Imperfect), Jason Z. Wong (Reunion), Ari Hyman (Ride Along), and Pascal Payant (White Blossoms).
- 12/13/2012
- MovieMaker.com
“We should get together and just make a movie” is the “we should open a bar” of Hollywood. Tons of people say it all the time because talk is affordable, but a very small percentage actually get out there and make it happen. That’s why it’s always refreshing to see people with talent match it with active ambition. Finite Films is built on fan-submitted concepts, crowd-funding and creativity. The fans and funding make sure they have user-submitted constraints on their filmmaking (think of it as Dogme 2012) and enough cash to get sandwiches for everyone; the creativity is all theirs. Of course, none of what they’re doing would be noteworthy if they weren’t churning out great short films every single month. After a submission and public voting process, the team takes their list of constraints (“One character has to be hiding a horrible secret”) and makes something magical happen. We...
- 5/31/2012
- by Cole Abaius
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
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