Deadline: February 5, 2010
This production funding initiative is designed to showcase international documentaries with powerful global stories that inform, inspire and connect Americans to the world at large.
ITVS INTERNATIONAL CALL
International Call provides production funds for independent producers who are non-U.S. citizens, helping them create documentaries for American television. Through the ITVS International Call, storytellers from other countries introduce U.S. audiences to their global neighbors, opening a window into unfamiliar lives, experiences and perspectives.
In addition to production funding and support, ITVS International will premiere funded programs on U.S public and commercial television, engaging viewers and maximizing impact through national promotion and educational outreach campaigns.
International Call is an initiative of the International Media Development Fund-a project created by ITVS in partnership with the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Ford Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
APPLYING TO ITVS INTERNATIONAL
Before applying to International Call, it is important to review our Production Agreement Note to understand the terms and conditions of ITVS funding. If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact Joy-Marie Scott at joy_scott@itvs.org or +1-415-356-8383 x232. ITVS office hours are 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM Pacific Daylight Time.
Please read the following guidelines carefully and complete the application according to the instructions in How To Apply. We require a written proposal, work-in-progress reels and a copy of a previously completed work in its entirety, including credits. No demo reels, or clip reels of your previous work, will be accepted. Incomplete proposals or unsigned applications will not be processed.
English is the working language. All written materials must be in English. Video materials must also be in English, subtitled if necessary. Producers may submit only one application for one program to International Call per year. A producer can not apply as a Primary Applicant and a Co-Applicant for two separate projects.
ITVS INTERNATIONAL IS LOOKING FOR
Programs that bring international perspectives, ideas, events and people to U.S. television
Content that represents diverse communities and advances underrepresented points of view
Content that explores globally significant themes and inspires public dialogue
Single, story-driven documentaries with broadcast hour versions
Programs that have already begun production and can be realistically completed within one year of contract
Co-production projects with either international broadcast partner(s) or co-productions with producers from different countries
ITVS INTERNATIONAL IS NOT LOOKING FOR
Projects solely from American producers; U.S. producers may partner with international producers and apply as co-applicants in true co-production relationships
Subject matter based in the United States, lifestyle or children's programming
Projects in development
Completed work for acquisition or distribution
Projects not intended for television or intended solely for theatrical release
Series proposals
Fictional dramas
INDEPENDENT PRODUCER ELIGIBILITY
Applicants must be "independent producers." This means that the individuals must have a) artistic, budgetary and editorial control of the project and b) the ability to grant ITVS the right to reversion for broadcast.
Applicants must be at least 18 years old.
The Primary Applicant must be a citizen of another country, who does not reside in the U.S. Applicants must identify their country of citizenship and legal residence.
Dual foreign/U.S. citizens are eligible if they do not reside in the U.S.
American citizens may only participate as Co-Applicants in a true co-production relationship with a non-U.S. Primary Applicant.
Applicants must have previous film or television production experience in a principal role (producer, co-producer, director or co-director) as demonstrated by credits on a sample tape of a previously completed work submitted with the application.
INELIGIBILITY
Students are not eligible.
U.S. residents, regardless of citizenship, are not eligible to apply as a Primary Applicant. (U.S. producers may partner with international producers and apply as co-applicants in true co-production relationships.)
Producers who are currently under ITVS contract are not eligible.
Organizations-NGOs, universities, foundations, nonprofit media organizations, etc.-are not eligible.
Supporting crew members-writers, production managers, production assistants, etc.-cannot submit an application on behalf of the project's director or producer.
If an individual does not possess artistic, budgetary and editorial control of the project, he/she is not eligible.
If an individual does not have the ability to grant ITVS the right to reversion the program for broadcast, he/she is not eligible.
If an individual submits an application as a Primary Applicant, he/she can not be a Co-Applicant on another project. Individuals can only submit one application per round.
FUNDING AMOUNTS
International Call funds must be used as production completion funds for the project. The range of production funds offered for each project will vary. Applicants should be realistic and request what they need to finish their programs. If a project is recommended for funding, ITVS will thoroughly review the budget and negotiate the proposal's funding request. A selected project will receive a funding offer that ITVS believes will allow the producers to complete the program for U.S. television broadcast.
ITVS FUNDING IS NOT A GRANT
Selected projects will receive funding once a Production License Agreement is executed. This is a contract that assigns ITVS International exclusive broadcast rights in the United States. Depending on the individual contract, ITVS International may participate in revenue sharing in all versions of the production. Please read the Production License Agreement note that follows the budget summary sheet.
TIMELINE
February: After the submission deadline, all applicants receive notification by mail or email within four weeks.
April: In early April, a limited number of applicants are asked to submit additional budget and production information with a narrative update.
May: A small group of finalists is given the opportunity to submit updated work-in-progress video (10 minutes maximum). This is not mandatory. Applicants receive final decisions within six to eight weeks.
Note: The entire proposal review process takes up to five months. Less than five percent of International Call applicants receive funding.
Garrett Scott Documentary Development Grant
What: This grant funds first time documentary makers for travel and accommodations at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, April 8-11, 2010. For four days, grant recipients will be given access to films, participate in master classes and be mentored by experienced filmmakers. TWO filmmakers will be chosen for the grant in its third year.
Deadline: Applications must be RECEIVED BY Friday, February 5, 2010. Applicants will be notified by email in early March.
About the Grant: Garrett Scott made a distinctive mark in documentary during his short career. Without any formal training in film, he directed Cul De Sac: A Suburban War Story, examining the case of a methamphetamine addict who stole a tank from an armory and went on a rampage through the San Diego suburbs. The film prompted Filmmaker Magazine to cite Scott as one of 25 New Faces of Independent Film. He went on to make Occupation: Dreamland, co-directed with Ian Olds, about U.S. soldiers in Falluja, Iraq. It won prizes at Full Frame and the Independent Spirit Awards. Both films were broadcast by the Sundance Channel. In 2006, Scott died of a heart attack at age 37.
Scott's work examined how the forces of state power and economics impact individuals. Stylistically, his films broke convention, giving audiences new perspectives on familiar milieus like suburbia or war torn Iraq. He was a beloved member of film communities in San Francisco and New York City and several points in between.
His friends, family and colleagues established this development grant to help other emerging filmmakers reach their potential. The grants selection committee looks especially for filmmakers who somehow fulfill Scott's example, by bringing a unique vision to the content and style of contemporary documentary making.
Previous grant recipients include Elinyisia Mosha and Cameron Yates in 2009, Rebecca Richman Cohen, Nathan Fisher and Mai Iskander in 2008 and Robin Hessman and Lee Lynch in 2007.
Criteria: Applicants must be a U.S. citizen or green card holder and live in the continental United States; any age 18 or older. By "first time filmmaker," we mean someone who is in the early stage of their documentary career and has not yet received significant recognition (such as major festival play or broadcast). All applicants should anticipate finishing their first project by March 2011. You still qualify as a "first time filmmaker" if you've made shorts or student projects, worked professionally as a crew member on other people's films, or if you've recently completed a documentary that hasn't been released yet. The grant is open to students and non-students alike.
How: Applicants should send a 2 page letter addressing these areas:
1) Project summary: Describe the documentary you're working on. It doesn't matter whether the film is a short or a feature, though the judging tends to favor more ambitious projects. Describe the characters, structure, visual approach and what stage you're at.
2) Director's statement: Describe how you came to filmmaking and how you've trained as a filmmaker. It doesn't matter whether you went to film school or are self-taught. Describe what you want audiences to take from your film.
Work sample: Applicants must send a 5-10 minute DVD sample of a work-in-progress or a past work. You may send a longer work sample, but judges may only review the opening minutes.
Submit TWO COPIES of both the letter and DVD along with your...
Name:
Address:
Phone:
E-mail:
Send to:
Full Frame Documentary Film Festival
ATTN: Garrett Scott Documentary Grant
324 Blackwell Street. Suite 500
Washington Building, Bay 5
Durham, NC 27701
Question or comment? e-mail us submissions@fullframefest.org
The Good Pitch at Tribeca
Deadline: February 8, 2010
The Good Pitch aims to bring together social-purpose film projects and a group of expert participants from charities, foundations, brands and media to form powerful alliances around groundbreaking films. It is open to projects looking for completion funding, outreach funding, campaigning networks, or any combination of the above.
britdoc.org/real_good/tribecca
Sundance Documentary Fund
Deadline: February 9, 2010
The Sundance Documentary Fund is a core program of the Documentary Film Program. It is dedicated to supporting U.S. and international feature length documentary films that focus on current human rights issues, freedom of expression, social justice, civil liberties, and exploring critical issues of our time.
for more info and to apply:
http://www.sundance.org/applications/dfp/
CELEBRATE THE AMERICAN CINEMATIC EXPERIENCE
Accepting Entries Jan 11 - Jun 16, 2010
ACEFEST has quickly become one of the most anticipated film
festivals on the industry calendar and this is YOUR chance to be part
of the excitement! The 2010 event is shaping up to be bigger and better
than ever with 8 full days of screenings, panels, workshops &
parties in the media capital of the world, New York City. ACEFEST is now accepting short and feature-length documentaries so be sure to submit your work today for the opportunity of a lifetime!
Why Submit?
- Get valuable perks just for entering your film
- Gain extra exposure in our annual Film Market
- Selected works build buzz by screening at our Press & Industry Night
- Picture it: Your film, sold out audience, in Manhattan!
Submit Now
www.acefest.com/submit
Read the guidelines, frequently asked questions, and download a submission form at:
http://www.kqed.org/arts/programs/trulyca/entries.jsp
Through one call for entry each year, KQED's Truly CA: Our State, Our Stories reaches out to the independent film community throughout the state to find completed or nearly completed feature-length documentaries. Truly CA films must be about California in some way -- not just taking place in California. The films must also be primarily shot in California, and preferably made by California's talented, independent, documentary filmmakers. We look for well-crafted stories featuring compelling characters -stories that are provocative, passionate, and unforgettable. Not only do we want well-told stories, we're interested in well-made films, works that are both thought-provoking and eye-opening.
If you have any questions about Truly CA, please contact Elizabeth Pepin, epepin@kqed.org
Call for Entries
Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers
Southern Circuit provides independent filmmakers with the opportunity to tour throughout the Southeastern United States, screen their work for new audiences, and engage those audiences in discussions about the work and its creation. Filmmakers selected for the 2010-2011 Southern Circuit will receive a $300 fee for each screening on the tour, paid travel expenses (domestic airfare and car rental) for the tour, and per diem for meals and lodging expenses. In return, selected filmmakers will travel to 8-10 designated venues throughout the Southeastern United States over a 10-12 day period, screen the selected feature-length project, engage audiences in a post-screening discussion, participate in program-related events coordinated by the host venues on the tour, and participate in the Southern Circuit blog and podcast interview to further promote the tour. For more information, go to www.southarts.org/southerncircuit or submit through www.withoutabox.com. Standard deadline is February 5; late deadline is February 12; WAB extended deadline is February 19. Southern Circuit is a program of the Southern Arts Federation.
IFP Documentary Lab
Deadline: February 12, 2010 (Narratives - March 26)
IFP's Independent Filmmaker Labs is the only free program in the U.S. supporting first-time feature directors at the crucial rough cut/post production stage. 20 projects (10 docs and 10 narratives) are selected for this year-long Lab fellowship which includes the five-day Lab in New York City, one-on-one mentorship with industry innovators and icons, and during IFP's Independent Film Week in September - pre-scheduled meetings with potential buyers, sales agents and festival programmers and inclusion in a Lab "Sneak Preview" Showcase presentation.
For more info and to apply:
http://labs.ifp.org/
The Banff World Television Awards call for entries is open, and they are currently accepting submissions into each of their 28 awards categories, which include multiple documentary categories.
Programs for the 2010 season of the competition can now be sent using an online video link, powered by Calamares. Please note that this is the preferred method to submit your program into the competition. The system accepts video files up to 1.5 GB in size, of the following file formats: AVI, MOV, MPG (MPEG, MP4, M2V, M4V), 3GP (3G2), WMV (ASF), FLV, or VOB.
If you have any questions regarding the entry form, please contact programcomp@banff2010.com.
Enter now and save with the early bird rate until February 1, 2010! (Final deadline for entries: February 15, 2010).
Documentary Short
Short Documentaries with a total running time of 4 - 30 minutes. (All films in a language other than English require English subtitles.)
MiniMovies
Very short documentaries and fiction forms, plus all experimental genres allowed with a total running time of less than 4 minutes (this is up to 3 minutes and 59 seconds, not a second more!). Go to the limit of documentary film making: free form -- free content. (All films in a language other than English require English subtitles.)
Documentary Medium-Length and Essay Forms
Medium length documentaries and documentarian film essays with a total running time of 31 - 60 minutes. (All films in a language other than English require English subtitles.)
Entry forms and more information can be found at www.docmiami.org/Festival.html
DocMiami is dedicated to promoting the best that documentary filmmaking has to offer worldwide and seeks to offer new forms of expression, whereby, thematic and cultural diversity shine as a distinct emblem, contributing to the evolution of the cultural arts within South Florida and within the entertainment industry as a whole. In addition to providing a documentary film festival, DocMiami will exhibit a film expo highlighting global film organizations and professionals, provide educational outreach programs for young filmmakers in grades 6-12, and host three benefit concerts to raise funds in order to build much needed schools in Tanzania! DocMiami International Film Festival will take place May 28-30, 2010, at the beautiful Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Miami, Florida.
Website: http://docmiami.org/
E-mail: info@docmiami.org
The February Entertainment Technology Exposition (formerly known as HD EXPO) enters its 9th year as the leading west coast venue where future technology and creative vision converge. Among the days panels are: "AVATAR" - Finishing the 3D Blockbuster and Keeping Production in California: Building an Influential Coalition To Save and Create Jobs and Business Now
February 18th, 2010
11:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Universal Hilton
Universal City, CA
Registration is now open and is free until February 17th AT 5:00pm PST. For more information call 818.842.6611 or visit http://www.createasphere.com/february/index.html.
A two day professional conference, co-located with the Createasphere Entertainment Technology Expo, is comprised of keynote presentations, expert panels, and educational sessions from technology leaders and industry insiders. The event also features an expo floor of exhibitors and industry sponsors providing a unique opportunity to explore specific products and talk with industry suppliers and experts. Networking mixers and VIP events will round out the conference. This conference and expo will shape the standards and explore the urgent global issues of digital asset management in the entertainment and media sector.
February 17th & 18th, 2010
The Universal Hilton
Universal City, CA
For more information or registration, please visit http://www.createasphere.com/damem_february/ or call 818.842.6611.
Blood Into Wine, the eagerly awaited documentary on Tool/Puscifer front man Maynard James Keenan and his vineyard partner Eric Glomski’s mission to bring notoriety and respect to Northern Arizona’s burgeoning wine industry, will premiere at the W Hotel in Scottsdale, AZ on Feb. 19 at 7:00 pm.
While the film focuses on Keenan’s winemaking, Blood Into Wine gives a larger picture of the often reclusive singer. “Maynard is as mysterious and complex as rumored so we don't know exactly why he allowed our cameras and questions into his world for the winemaking year of 2009,” explains co-director Ryan Page.
"But once we got past his pitbulls and his crossbows we were surprised that Maynard was open with us challenging the perception of him as a celebrity winemaker and the notion that making wine in Arizona is like making wine on the moon. Maynard and Eric continue to surprise the winemaking world right now," co-director Christopher Pomerenke adds.
Co-directed by Ryan Page and Christopher Pomerenke (Moog, The Heart is a Drum Machine), the documentary was shot using multiple Red One cameras, allowing cinematographer Cary Truelick to capture the craggy landscape surrounding Keenan’s vineyards in stunning detail. Editor Robert Beadle skillfully worked with over 200 hours of footage to help craft the story of two pioneer winemakers in an unforgiving region. Blood Into Wine was Produced by Chris "Topper" McDaniel, Ryan Page, Jason Stall, and Christopher Pomerenke.
Nationwide screenings will be announced shortly with a DVD release coming Spring 2010.
www.newschool.edu
NO TOMORROW takes viewers inside a suspenseful death penalty trial and challenges their beliefs about capital punishment.
Please join us for the world premiere of this new documentary by Roger Weisberg and Vanessa Roth at the 2010 Cinequest Film Festival in San Jose, CA
Saturday, Feb. 27 at 1:45pm - Camera 12, 201 South Second Street
Sunday Feb. 28 at 11:30pm - San Jose Repertory Theatre, 101 Paseo de San Antonio
Saturday, March 6 at 6:30pm - Camera 12, 201 South Second Street
Tickets available online at http://www.cinequest.org or by calling 408.295.3378 (FEST)
The contest invites non-professional, aspiring reporters to share their stories with the world.
With two rounds over three months, short documentary assignments will be judged on the quality of the stories reported and the production value of the videos. An expert panel led by the Pulitzer Center will choose ten finalists from the first round to receive technology prizes from Sony and Intel. The ten finalists will compete to receive one of five $10,000 grants to work with the Pulitzer Center on an under-reported international story.
Round 1 launches today
The assignment:
Document a single day in the life of a compelling person the world should meet and showcase how that person is making a positive impact in his or her community.
All videos must be three minutes or less. Submissions will be open through February 28, to see submission requirements, check out the official rules.
The Pulitzer Center has provided over one hundred grants for reporting projects that spotlight critical international issues. Watch the video below to see what we are looking for in a video submission to Project: Report.
For more info: http://www.pulitzercenter.org/open.cfm?id=984