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    Home » Tribeca Film Fest Bows Amid Turbulent Times

    Tribeca Film Fest Bows Amid Turbulent Times

    By SHOOT StaffWednesday, April 22, 2009Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1817 Views
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    In this film publicity image released by the Tribeca Film Festival, Sasha Grey is shown in a scene from Steven Soderbergh's film, "The Girlfriend Experience." (AP Photo/Tribeca Film Festival)

    By Jake Coyle, Entertainment Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    The eighth annual Tribeca Film Festival bows amid a turbulent time for movies, which is evident at this year’s festival both on screen and off.
        The epicenter of the festival, co-founded by Robert De Niro to help revive Lower Manhattan after Sept. 11, is just blocks away from ground zero for the current economic crisis: Wall St. Several of the films at Tribeca portray or examine the current economy, including the sub-prime mortgage documentary “American Casino” and Steven Soderbergh’s ultra-current “The Girlfriend Experience.”
        The festival, which begins today, has shrunk to 85 films, down from a high of 157 in 2007. A leaner fest may be a positive for Tribeca, which some have in the past called unwieldy. Sponsorships also are down.
        But belt-tightening has been going on for a year or more across independent film, whose own crisis has been exacerbated by the economic collapse. Studios have contracted their output and indie l abels, like Warner Independent Pictures and Picturehouse, have shuttered.
        Locally, the landscape of New York’s influential independent film is also in flux. The older, prestigious, uptown Film Society of Lincoln Center is in the middle of a shake-up following the arrival of new executive director Mara Manus. The vital indie distributor New Yorker Films closed shop in February.
        After 19 years as the director of the Sundance Film Festival, Geoff Gilmore left earlier this year to join Tribeca Enterprises – the parent company of the New York festival – as chief creative officer. Longtime Tribeca artistic director Peter Scarlet left shortly thereafter to become the executive director of Abu Dhabi’s Middle East Film Festival.
        This game of musical chairs is just another example of how the world of independent cinema is changing and being challenged.
        “It’s not just independent film; it’s the world of cinema,” said Gilmore. “The changes that are going on globa lly are just remarkable, and of course it’s exacerbated and transformed by the economic crisis that’s affected the whole world. But we’re in the middle of a technological revolution.”
        Film distribution is increasingly going digital, with movies being made available online or by video-on-demand. Production has become cheaper, making it easier for anyone to make a movie. And at the same time, financing is becoming harder to find.
        It all adds up, Gilmore says, to film festival having to adapt.
        “I’ve never seen the film industry going through such a period of questioning about what it’s doing,” said Gilmore. “Festivals have a different role.”
        Nobody claims to have figured out the future, but Gilmore and others are plainly excited at the opportunities. Filmmakers, too, say there are more options today – that it’s not about waiting for a studio executive to swoop in.
        “It’s a difficult time for independent film in general, and certainly for independent documentaries,” said Leslie Cockburn, director of “American Casino.” ”But there are people thinking in really interesting ways about what to do, about how to distribute.”
        Such topics are sure to be much discussed at Tribeca, which runs until May 3. Among the many “Tribeca Talks” panel discussions, is one on the future of the independents.
        But it won’t be all doom and gloom. The festival makes efforts to host populist fare, including a mini “family festival,” a number of sports films presented in tandem with ESPN, and the annual “drive-in” where films are presented outside and for free. (This year’s crop: “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” ”Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” and the hip-hop documentary “P-Star Rising.”)
        The festival kicks off with the premiere of Woody Allen’s new comedy starring Larry David, “Whatever Works.” Fittingly for Tribeca, it’s his first New York-set film after four European excursions.
        Nancy Schaeffer, executive director of the festival, said they made a conscious effort to add levity and distraction to the program.
        “What do I think happens in times like this? We create better products and we survive and make better movies,” said Schaeffer. “The question is going to be: How do we package those things? How do we let people know they’re there?”
        There are a number of films worthy of attention: The dark political satire “In the Loop,” which co-stars James Gandolfini as a U.S. general, might be called a modern day “Dr. Strangelove,” with Beltway offices substituting for Kubrick’s war room. In “Outrage,” Kirby Dick (“This Film is Not Rated”) documents gay politicians who are in the closet and yet oppose gay rights. And Irish playwright Conor McPherson, who’s won raves for plays filled with hardy drinking and supernatural visitors, has brought the same milieu to the screen in his most significant film yet, “The Eclipse,” which stars Ciaran Hinds.
        There are many more – and perhaps a few will supply new ideas for the future of independent film.
        “Whenever I despair about where independent cinema might be going,” said Soderbergh, whose 1989 “Sex, Lies, and Videotape” is considered an indie landmark, “I’m very conscious of the fact that somewhere right now is some filmmaker sweating over their movie that we won’t know about for another six months or a year that could totally alter the landscape.”
        Soderbergh added: “That’s what keeps me hopeful.”

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    Grand Clio and “Of The Year” Winners Are Celebrated At 67th Awards Ceremony

    Wednesday, May 13, 2026

    Winners of the Clio Awards were unveiled during a live ceremony hosted by actor, writer, and producer Keegan-Michael Key on Tuesday (5/12) evening in New York. True to the global nature of the competition, 20 Grand Clio Awards were presented to culturally and creatively groundbreaking entries from France, Puerto Rico, Italy, Germany, Singapore, India, Mexico the U.K and U.S.

    Grand Clios in the Business To Business Advertiser Type were awarded for:

    Direct: “Pub Succession” by LePub Milan for Heineken

    Grand Clios in the Public Service Advertiser Type were awarded for:

    Branded Entertainment & Content: “The Final Exam” by BBDO Chicago for Change The Ref
    Culture & Influence: “The Final Exam” by BBDO Chicago for Change The Ref
    Film Craft: “Trails Will Blaze” by NOMINT for BBC

    Grand Clios in the Product/Service Advertiser Type were awarded for:

    Audio: “The Unofficial Sound of F1” by Leo India for Sting
    Branded Entertainment & Content: “Gulf of Mexico (Bar)” by LePub Mexico City for Tecate
    Creative Business Transformation: “THREE WORDS” by Publicis Conseil for AXA
    Creative Disruption: “Gulf of Mexico (Bar)” by LePub Mexico City for Tecate
    Creative Strategy: “Vaseline Verified” by Ogilvy Singapore for Vaseline
    Culture & Influence: “I WOOL SURVIVE” by SERVICEPLAN GERMANY for Grindr
    Design: “Vi Guardian Beads” by Ogilvy Mumbai for Vi (Vodafone Idea)
    Digital/Mobile: “Tracking Bad Bunny” by DDB Latina Puerto Rico for Bad Bunny
    Direct: “Vaseline Verified” by Ogilvy Singapore for Vaseline
    Experience/Activation: “Expedition Impossible” by adam&eveTBWA for Columbia... Read More

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