FkN Newsletter
March #2 2010

FkN News

FkN at Sunny Side of the Doc
Filmkontakt
Nord hosts an umbrella stand for Nordic producers at Sunny Side of the
Doc and facilitates co-production and distribution contacts on the
international market. The event takes place in La Rochelle, France, in June, and the FkN registration deadline is 19 April. To learn more about what FkN is offering and how to participate, read here.

NPM ONLINE Launch
The more than 250
submissions for the first Nordisk Panorama deadline on 15 February have
now been processed, and the films that were entered for Nordisk
Panorama Market Online are ready to be launched. Stay tuned for a
plethora of new Nordic high-quality content to be released on Monday 29
March! Nordisk Panorama Market Online is available to buyers, festival
programmers, distributors and sales agents around the clock at no
charge. To learn more, read here. To submit your film for Nordisk Panorama Festival and Market, don't miss the deadline on 15 May. Read more here.

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FkN at the International Film Festival Summit
Katrine
Kiilgaard will be attending the International Film Festival Summit's
Europe Conference in Amsterdam 8-9 April. Here she will join a panel on
"Industry Meetings and Professional Development at Festivals" together
with representatives from a.o. IDFA, Thessaloniki International Film
Festival, German Film Export Union, and London Independent Film. To see
the full conference agenda, read here.

Meet FkN at MIPDoc/MIP-TV
Katrine
Kiilgaard will be attending MIPDoc and MIP-TV 10-14 April to promote
the latest short and documentary films available at the Nordisk
Panorama Market Online platform. To set up a meeting with Katrine
Kiilgaard in Cannes at stand H4.35, send an email or call +45 3311 5152.

New Nordic and International Initiatives

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SVT Strengthens Documentary Profile
A new documentary slot on TV and full-length streaming of documentaries online, are new initiatives at SVT.
Documentaries
aired on SVT TV can now be watched in full-length on SVT online, in
combination with interviews, clips and latest news from the documentary
film sector.
Since the sneak premiere in December last year, around 160.000 viewers have clicked a documentary title.
As
part of the online initiative, SVT also plans to give exposure to
interactive documentaries experimenting with form. Three films made in
collaboration with students from the Södertörn Highschool are to
premiere soon.
An independent section of SVT online is dedicated
to shorts. The Oscar-nominated Instead of Abracadabra and Seeds of the
Fall awarded in Cannes, both by Patrik Eklund, and the Nordisk Panorama
award-winner Åsa Johannisson’s Fish, are among the titles available.
An additional SVT online initiative is to show clips from films in production.
New SVT DOX slot
From
30 March on, SVT offers the cream of Nordic and international
award-winning documentaries on the new documentary slot DOX every
Tuesday night at 22h.
Erik Gandini's Videocracy, Fredrik Gertten's
Bananas!* and The Invisible Cell by Anders Riis-Hansen, 2009 are among
the titles in this spring programming.
Like the Danish DR slot
Documania, the intention of SVT's DOX slot is to offer ”riveting,
engaging and provocating docs” with focus on newly produced
documentaries as well as classics.
Read more here.

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New Nordic Initiative to Stimulate Cross Media Content for Kids
With
a new High Five initiative, Nordisk Film & TV Fond aims to support
the development of cross media and provide quality content for children
and youth on all platforms including film, TV and new media.
The initiative is targeted children aged 3-6 and 7-10.
The
Nordisk Film & TV Fund wishes to encourage film and television
production companies to collaborate with Nordic game suppliers to
develop their skills and knowledge in cross media.
A selection of six cross media projects will receive development funding and access to international expertise.
To read more about the programmes and deadlines, click here.

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New Talent Programme at NFI
As an
incentive for established filmmakers to explore and challenge
themselves in order to develop creatively, the Norwegian Film Institute
has launched a new funding programme.
The Talent Programme, similar
to the Danish counterpart New Danish Screen, offers financial support
to established filmmakers who want to develop their skills during the
development stage.
The programme runs parallel to NFI’s existing
support schemes and consists of four development schemes covering
feature length films, animation, documentaries and shorts.
In the
selection process emphasis is given to the applicant’s potential for
artistic development as well to his or hers earlier works.
NFI
expects to give development funding to 8-10 documentaries and
production support to 4-6 documentaries and short films in 2010.
There are no fixed deadlines for submissions.
The annual budget of the scheme is NOK 21 million. Head of the scheme is Eva Færevaag.
For more details about the scheme, see NFI's website.

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Cinestar to Distribute Tempo Festival Titles
As
a result of an agreement between the Tempo Documentary Film Festival
and the new digital distribution company Cinestar, several titles
screened at the Tempo Documentary Film Festival will now reach a larger
audience on new digital platforms.
Cinestar launched in Sweden this March, is operating with VOD and streaming video using a per-per-view model.
Describing
itself as an alternative distribution platform, Cinestar will focus on
the Nordic territories and invite producers and single right-holders to
collaborate on non-exclusive terms.
The Cinestar website will be
launched later this spring offering an online catalogue including art
house, cinema, documentaries, contemporary world cinema, classics.
Special attention is given to films that have been in the festival
circuit. A few selected titles will be distributed on DVD and
theatrically.
To learn more about Cinestar, contact Head of Distribution is Patrick Sobieski.

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DFI and DR Boost Animation
With an
additional DKK 5 million from Danish Broadcast Corporation, DR, the
fund to support children's animation films set up by the Danish Film
Institute as part of the Danish film deal, now has a budget of DKK 15
million. In 2010 the fund will support 4-8 animated films to be aired
on DR's Children's Channel Ramasjang.
The initiative is aimed at
younger professional directors, trained in animation, who have not yet
signed a feature length film or longer TV-series. The fund supports
films of 25-45 minute with a max. price of DKK 80.000. Per minute.
Upcoming deadlines are 1 May for development support and 1 October for
production support.

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Continued Support to International Distributors
Nordisk Film & TV Fond’s pilot programme High Five International Cinema Distribution Support Scheme is continued until 2012.
This
means that non-Nordic distributors interested in acquiring and
releasing Nordic films in their territories can apply for
non-refundable grants ranging from DKK 7.500 to a maximum of DKK
150.000. The programme is financed by Nordic Council of Ministers.
A
broadening of the initial scheme makes all Nordic features and
documentary films eligible for distribution on the condition that they
have had a previous theatrical release domestically or an international
launch after 1 October 2009.
The first application deadline for the High Five International Cinema Distribution Support is 16 August 2010.
For more information, see Nordisk Film & TV Fond's website.

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4 Million to 3 Danish Festivals
The Copenhagen Film Festivals: CPH:DOX, CPH:PIX and BUSTER, the Copenhagen International Film Festival for Children and youth receive DKK 4 million from the Danish Film Institute.
In
2008 the three festivals merged into the Copenhagen Film Festivals with
the objective to strengthen the organisational frame work. Each of the
festivals has maintained a distinct profile and over the years the
Copenhagen festivals have enjoined an increasing popularity among both
local and international audiences.
Next upcoming festival is CPH:PIX that runs from 15-25 April.

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FilmFyn Facing Budget Downsizing
Due to
financial cuttings in public budgets, the regional Danish film fund,
FilmFyn, loses local investment from the municipality of Langeland.
Out
of an annual budget of 12 million of which approx. 7 million are
invested in feature films shot in the area, FilmFyn will lose DKK
350.000 in 2010 and in 2011 DKK 600.000, representing the entire local
investment from the municipality of Langeland.
In spite of the
reduced budget FilmFyn will continue its activities but will turn
towards alternative funding from the region and The Danish Film
Institute.
Read more here.

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TV4 Expands to Norway
From 22 March,
Norwegian households connected to Canal Digital can enjoy documentary
programmes on TV4 Fakta that now launches in Norway.
Until 1 June the channel can be watched for free. After this date, TV4 Fakta will be available in selected TV-packages.
TV4
started to broadcast in Sweden and Finland in 2005 and is owned by
Sweden's TV4 group, itself controlled by the Bonnier Group.

IDFA Abandons Competition for Short Documentary
The
competitive section for short documentaries at the International
Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, IDFA, no longer exists. Instead,
selected short docs are now included in the non-competitive sections
Reflecting Images, the IDFA Competition for First Appearance, IDFA
Competition for Student Documentary, Paradocs or the IDFA Competition
for Dutch Documentary. The latter has changed name from Premieres from
the Lowlands.
More about changes of regulations and deadlines on IDFA's website.

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Babelgum: Screenings on Mobiles
This
year’s edition of the global web-based short film festival Babelgum
will provide a simultaneous mobile and online viewing platform and
voting features for the worldwide community of viewers.
Created in
2007, the Babelgum festival is dedicated to independent short films and
aims to provide a global showcase for emerging film talents all over
the world.
Films running up to 15 minutes are eligible for four categories: Animation, Narrative, Non-narrative and Documentary.
Read more about the festival here.

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Streaming to Replace DVDs
The Tampere
Film Festival and the digital distribution company reelport join forces
to implement a festival submission workflow without DVDs by digitising
all short film submissions to European film festivals.
The Tampere
Film Festival will be responsible for the digitisation process and
reelport will do the encoding and make the films available for
streaming and downloads.
More than 3.500 titles have alreday been
digitised for the Video Library in Tampere, and the festival estimates
that more than 10.000 short films will be available by the end of the
year for festivals participation in the digitising scheme.
Festivals interested in joining the distribution scheme, read more here.

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Pitching: Do's and Dont's
A good pitch
is essential for raising interest and money for a project. It’s the
first step towards bringing an idea to the screen, so a lot is at
stakes when pitching.
On the regional film initiative Filmkraft
Rogaland's website, Mike Robinson, advisor and moderator for Cartoon
Forum and Cartoon Movie and a pitch expert, offers advice on how to
succeed your pitch in his mini-guide.
The Guide is divided in a To Do and a To Avoid section, for example: Know your market, Be prepared! And Show passion!
The Guide can be found here.

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Piracy Threatens Employment
Illegal
downloads and file sharing is happening every day, and the creative
industries in Europe suffer important economic losses as a consequence
of digital piracy.
A new study carried out by The International
Chamber of Commerce’s BASCAP (Business Action to Stop Counterfeiting
and Piracy) shows how piracy has provoked massive losses of jobs in the
European creative industries.
According to the study, 185.000 jobs
were lost in 2008 as a consequence of piracy, and it predicts losses up
to 1.3 million by 2015.
14 million people work in the creative
industries in Europe, representing 6.5% of the total work force and
these workers contribute with 6.9% to the total European GDP.
The study emphasizes the need to call for action towards a legislative initiatives in the area.
Read more about the study here.