Posts Tagged ‘Channel 4 Britdoc Foundation’

The deadline to apply for the Good Pitch at IFP is this Monday, June 1. We’d like to encourage filmmakers to review the priorities for this upcoming forum, which will focus on projects that address the UN Millennium Development Goals, and consider submitting if your project is a good fit.

According to the Good Pitch press release, this unique forum”brings together inspiring social-purpose film projects and expert participants from charities, foundations, brands, government and media.” Filmmakers pitch their projects and outreach plans with the goal of forming strategic alliances across multiple avenues. The alliances sparked at the Good Pitch will ideally help the filmmakers enhance their funding and audience building efforts and achieve greater impact. Participants watching the pitch may offer funding, constituent email lists, cross-promotional initiatives and more.

Adella Ladjevardi, Cinereach Grants Manager, attended the North American debut of the Good Pitch earlier this month at HotDocs. All five invited projects dealt with human rights related themes, which was the focus of the audience as well.

Good Pitch Session in Action

Good Pitch Session in Action

Adella was impressed with the unique format of the Good Pitch. Filmmakers were given pitching workshops  from Judith Helfand and Robert West before the forum to increase the effectiveness of their presentations. The audience for each project’s pitch was also specifically tailored to increase the likelihood that useful “matches” would be made. A filmmaker would have to invest a lot of time, leg work and money to create such opportunities for herself, Adella said. During the forum, each filmmaker sat at the head of a long table with a dozen people from various NGOs, Funders and Broadcasters.

The filmmakers made a short verbal and video pitch, and the others at the table offered feedback. A room full of observes watched from all sides. A potentially intimidating experience for the filmmakers, Adella observed, but one that offered invaluable exposure.

It will be exciting to see what kinds of partnerships form because of relationships made at the forum, and to watch these projects emerge in the coming months and years.

“The Promise of Freedom,” by Sean Flynn and Beth Murphy, was a project that received instant gratification. After watching Sean and Beth pitch, Adella commented, “Chicken & Egg Pictures was ready to match a production grant previously awarded to the project – right at the table!”


On Friday, Cinereach Founder and Executive Director Philipp Engelhorn participated in a panel at the first edition of “Envision: Addressing Global Issues Through Documentaries.” The event, to take place annually, consisted of two days of screenings and symposia. Envision is a joint project of the United Nations Department of Public Information (UNDPI) and the Independent Feature Project (IFP) and is designed for those interested in how global issues can be addressed through documentary film.

A panel at Envision 2009

A panel at Envision 2009

The panel was asked to discuss sources of, and motivation for, funding for issue-oriented docs and included: Nina Chaudry, from Wide Angle; Judith Helfand of Chicken & Egg and Working Films; Patricia Finneran of the Sundance Institute; and Emily Verellen from The Fledgling Fund. Filmmaker Annie Sundberg, Producer of THE DEVIL CAME ON HORSEBACK, moderated.  The panelists (all speaking as funders of socially relevant films) represented a variety of mandates, challenges, agendas, and levels of involvement with funded projects.

Envision

In a letter to participants, Eric Falt of DPI and Michelle Byrd of IFP wrote that participants in Envision included the international filmmaking community, civil society organizations, entrepreneurs, activists, journalists, philanthropists, public policy makers, NGOs, the general public, and representatives from the UN. “The primary focus of this year’s program,” they said, was “the UN Millennium Development Goals and their impact on women.” Films screened included: ROUGH AUNTIES, PRAY THE DEVIL BACK TO HELL and THE GLASS HOUSE.

On a parallel note, Cinereach Grants Manager, Adella Ladjevardi, recently returned from Hot Docs, where she was invited to participate in “The Good Pitch.”  The Good Pitch is a touring pitch forum created by Channel 4 Britdoc Foundation and the Sundance Institue Documentary Program, supported by the The Fledgling Fund, Working Films and others. Hot Docs marked the North American debut of The Good Pitch (which kicked off last year in the UK). Its focus is to give select filmmakers an opportunity to pitch their films and outreach campaigns to foundations, NGOs, campaigners, advertising agencies, brands and media to form alliances that can enhance each film’s impact.

Cinereach is pleased to see this trend – in the tradition of Working Films and the hundreds of socially conscious filmmakers who have long sought to connect inspiring stories with change-makers – toward creating a structured, public space for these pairings.

As an organization that supports both documentaries and narrative films of vitality and craft, Cinereach hopes to eventually see independent fiction filmmakers with a similarly grassroots approach included in efforts like this in the future.

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