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Best-behaved
Festival in the World
Midway
through the festival, director Piers
Handling and managing director Michele Maheux have much to be
proud of. Aside from a few obnoxious guests at a screening of Girlfight
(who screamed profanities so loudly that the audience
could not hear most of the show), Toronto is thus far living up
to its reputation as one of the best organized, best-behaved festivals
in the world. One fan of the festival is Aussie actress Susie Porter
(in two films here: Better than Sex and The
Monkey's Mask). In heels and a fishnet black
top, she said she was having a great time in Toronto as she dashed
off to her next screening.
Filmfestivals.com
Celebrates Festival Directors
Speaking of festival directors -- they are often the unsaluted souls
who absorb the many headaches of festivals. Everything from planning,
recruiting, fundraising and promoting falls on their shoulders.
The guests of honor at an invite-only dinner thrown by Filmfestival.com
CEO Malo Girod de l'Ain and his team at the Urban restaurant in
downtown Toronto brought together guests from around the world,
including New York, Las Vegas, Singapore, Los Angeles, Seattle,
Brussels and Rotterdam. In addition, a few non-festival folk joined
the crowd, including Nathon Gunn (President and Founder of Bitcasters.com),
and Andy Robbins (Miramax's director of online marketing). For many
guests, it was the first chance to swap stories with so many fellow
directors. Before the dinner, the annual Alliance party at the ROM
-- otherwise known as the Royal Ontario Museum -- attracting a standing-room
only crowd. Among those standing were Willem Dafoe, who is in town
to promote Shadow of the Vampire.
"Prophets
and Profits" Unite
Today the festival's biz group gathered at the Four Seasons for
the panel discussion called "Prophets and Profits" --
named for the prophets (film critics) and the profits (internet
folks) on the panel. On the profit side were Rachel Shapiro (VP
of Sales and Marketing at reelplay.com), Beki Probst (director of
the European Film Market at the Berlin Film Festival), and John
Fitzgerald (VP of Programming for iFilm.com). Their voices were
a bit muted, as the prophets tended to dominate the conversation.
Prophets included online film critics David Poland (the self-described
"professional cynic") and Jeffrey Wells; and Gerald Peary,
a print journalist for The Boston Phoenix. The panel was
promoted as a forum to dicuss online marketing versus traditional
methods -- but it quickly turned into a spirited showcase for the
critics to argue with each other. In the respites from their engaging
debates, a few topical points emerged.
Up
to now, the only contemporary journalist to "put the butts
in the seats" as Poland put it -- has been Roger Ebert, whose
popularity was greatly helped by television. So far, no online critic
has emerged with this prophetic ability. Poland noted that the one
advantage of internet critique is their intimacy -- he often receives
immediate feedback with his readers. Both sides saw the internet
as an "enhancer" -- Shapiro noted that internet sites
can help build interest in a film or a fest, but in the end, deals
are done via personal relationships, lending new credence to the
phrase it's not what you know but who you know.
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