24th August 2010
Docs 360 - Last chance to apply
Last chance to apply for Docs 360, a 9-month development programme and competition for documentary filmmakers who want to use cross-platform strategies to develop, finance, market and distribute their film. The programme is backed by Skillset¹s Film Skills Fund, digital marketing agency Channel D and leading UK distributor Dogwoof, and run by Initialize Films and the Digital Filmmakers¹ Network. The winning team will receive £5,000 towards the completion of their film plus £20,000 worth of digital marketing support.
Deadline for applications: 31 August 2010.
For more information please go to
www.docs360.co.uk
Last chance to apply for Docs 360, a 9-month development programme and competition for documentary filmmakers who want to use cross-platform strategies to develop, finance, market and distribute their film. The programme is backed by Skillset¹s Film Skills Fund, digital marketing agency Channel D and leading UK distributor Dogwoof, and run by Initialize Films and the Digital Filmmakers¹ Network. The winning team will receive £5,000 towards the completion of their film plus £20,000 worth of digital marketing support.
Deadline for applications: 31 August 2010.
For more information please go to
www.docs360.co.uk
16th August 2010
Partnership for Growth
Knowledge is power. And with a Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP), you can grow your business with the powerful support of a leading UK university.
Part-funded KTP's are a cost effective way for you to access the latest research, technologies and expertise of the University of Hertfordshire.
For further information about the KTP scheme please contact us on 01707 286406 or e-mail us at
ktp@herts.ac.uk to find out more or to book an appointment with one of the team.
Knowledge is power. And with a Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP), you can grow your business with the powerful support of a leading UK university.
Part-funded KTP's are a cost effective way for you to access the latest research, technologies and expertise of the University of Hertfordshire.
For further information about the KTP scheme please contact us on 01707 286406 or e-mail us at
ktp@herts.ac.uk to find out more or to book an appointment with one of the team.
03rd August 2010
RTS Opens Entries For Craft & Design Awards 2009/2010
The Royal Television Society (RTS), Britain’s leading forum for television and related media, has launched the Craft & Design Awards 2009/2010.
The Awards recognise the huge variety of skills and processes involved in programme production, from costume design and digital effects to editing and lighting.
Nigel Pickard, Group Director, Family Entertainment and Drama at RDF Media Group, is chairing this year’s awards. The judging panels will be drawn from leading broadcasters including BBC, C4, Five, ITV, Sky and S4C.
The awards are designed to recognise the wealth of talent within the industry and the various categories highlight achievements...
The Royal Television Society (RTS), Britain’s leading forum for television and related media, has launched the Craft & Design Awards 2009/2010.
The Awards recognise the huge variety of skills and processes involved in programme production, from costume design and digital effects to editing and lighting.
Nigel Pickard, Group Director, Family Entertainment and Drama at RDF Media Group, is chairing this year’s awards. The judging panels will be drawn from leading broadcasters including BBC, C4, Five, ITV, Sky and S4C.
The awards are designed to recognise the wealth of talent within the industry and the various categories highlight achievements from across the board.
Nigel Pickard, Chair of the RTS Craft & Design Awards, said: “We are lucky enough to have some of the world’s finest craft and design talent living and working in the UK. These awards recognise their dedication, innovation and skill, without which UK television would be lost.”
The award categories:
• Effects – recognises achievement in digital and special effects and picture enhancement.
• Makeup Design – recognises achievement in all areas of make up including hair styling and wigs in categories of drama and entertainment & non-drama productions.
• Costume Design – recognises achievement in drama and entertainment & non–drama productions.
• Graphic Design – recognises achievement in trails & packaging, programme content sequences and titles.
• Production Design – recognises achievement in entertainment & non-drama productions and drama.
• Photography – recognises achievement in drama and documentary/factual & non-drama productions.
• Lighting and Multicamera – recognises achievement in lighting for multicamera and multicamera work.
• Sound – recognises achievement in entertainment & non-drama productions and drama.
• Tape and Film Editing – recognises achievement in drama, documentary/factual and entertainment & situation comedy. This award is designed to recognise skills in tape editing in multicamera studio/OB programming.
• Music – recognises achievement in original title music and original score. The titles or score must be specially commissioned for a specific programme.
Other awards given at the discretion of the jury chairs include:
• Design and Craft Innovation – recognises outstanding achievement from any area of programme making, demonstrating innovative use of technology or techniques.
• Judges’ Award – recognises outstanding achievement of creative craft and design within the criteria year.
• Lifetime Achievement Award – recognises outstanding achievement of creative craft or design.
All entries must have been first transmitted in the UK between 1 September 2009 and 31 August 2010. The fee per entry is £115.15 (Inc. VAT). The closing date for entries is Wednesday 1 September 2010. The Awards Dinner will be held on Wednesday 24 November 2010 at The Savoy, London.
For more details or to download an entry form, please visit
www.rts.org.uk or call +44 (0) 20 7822 2810.
02nd August 2010
Long Stratton girl's imagination lands a TV showing
The wild imagination of a south Norfolk schoolgirl has been channelled into a new computer-generated animation due to air on national television this year.
Heather Doyle, 11, of Long Stratton, was one of eight talented youngsters from across the country to be named as a winner of ITV's Share A Story competition.
The contest, which attracted about 1,200 entries, asked children aged five to 12 to design an original cartoon with successful submissions then being professionally produced and broadcast to millions of viewers as part of ITV's children's programming.
Heather's winning two-minute animation, called Captain Bikini Bob and the Evil Bin, tells the...
The wild imagination of a south Norfolk schoolgirl has been channelled into a new computer-generated animation due to air on national television this year.
Heather Doyle, 11, of Long Stratton, was one of eight talented youngsters from across the country to be named as a winner of ITV's Share A Story competition.
The contest, which attracted about 1,200 entries, asked children aged five to 12 to design an original cartoon with successful submissions then being professionally produced and broadcast to millions of viewers as part of ITV's children's programming.
Heather's winning two-minute animation, called Captain Bikini Bob and the Evil Bin, tells the story of a trainee superhero who uses a pair of pink frilly knickers and her super-powered bottom to defeat a wicked bin which eats everything in its path.
Last week Heather was whisked off to ITV's offices in Manchester to record the voices of her characters. She is now excitedly waiting for September to roll round when the premiere of her creation is scheduled.
For the full story please click
here
29th July 2010
Pick the Tick
Skillset's "Pick the Tick"communications campaign highlights their work in promoting best practice higher and further education across the UK.
The campaign includes raising industry awareness of the innovative approaches undertaken by institutions and individual courses within the Skillset 'Tick' network, as well as ensuring that individuals looking for a career in the media search for the 'Tick' as a mark of quality and industry endorsement.
With industry and education working together through the 'Tick' network of Film and Media Acadamies, as well as Accredited courses in animation, computer games and screenwriting, Skillset are looking to produce the talented innovators and leaders of...
Skillset's "Pick the Tick"communications campaign highlights their work in promoting best practice higher and further education across the UK.
The campaign includes raising industry awareness of the innovative approaches undertaken by institutions and individual courses within the Skillset 'Tick' network, as well as ensuring that individuals looking for a career in the media search for the 'Tick' as a mark of quality and industry endorsement.
With industry and education working together through the 'Tick' network of Film and Media Acadamies, as well as Accredited courses in animation, computer games and screenwriting, Skillset are looking to produce the talented innovators and leaders of the future - those who will ensure the UK's creative industries remain globally competitive and at the forefront of productivity and business innovation.
A promotional DVD featuring BAFTA award winner Noel Clarke is available, along with marketing related materials, by e-mailing Jane Maguire
janem@skillset.org or by calling 020 7713 9800.
In addition to the DVD, this film, along with the one minute version and the "Making of" film is also available online via SkillsetTV on YouTube at
www.youtube.com/skillsettv.
27th July 2010
DCMS acknowledges value of Screen Agencies
Following the announcement on 26 July 2010, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport acknowledged the value of the screen agencies by issuing an endorsement: “The screen agencies do an excellent job promoting film production, video games development, skills and more. For a relatively small investment, they have encouraged investment of over £50m in the audio-visual creative industries across all regions. Retaining this level of support is important and we are considering how the important function they perform fits in with the planned Local Enterprise Partnerships”.
Following the announcement on 26 July 2010, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport acknowledged the value of the screen agencies by issuing an endorsement: “The screen agencies do an excellent job promoting film production, video games development, skills and more. For a relatively small investment, they have encouraged investment of over £50m in the audio-visual creative industries across all regions. Retaining this level of support is important and we are considering how the important function they perform fits in with the planned Local Enterprise Partnerships”.
26th July 2010
UK Film Council to be abolished
In an announcement on 26 July 2010, Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, outlined plans to abolish the UK Film Council as part of an efficiency review of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport’s (DCMS) 55 public bodies.
The DCMS said that the main activities carried out by the UK Film Council, which currently has an annual budget of £15m to invest in British film and employs 75 staff, would continue through other organisations. Mr Hunt said he wanted to establish "a direct and less bureaucratic relationship with the British Film Institute" and that Government and Lottery support for film would...
In an announcement on 26 July 2010, Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, outlined plans to abolish the UK Film Council as part of an efficiency review of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport’s (DCMS) 55 public bodies.
The DCMS said that the main activities carried out by the UK Film Council, which currently has an annual budget of £15m to invest in British film and employs 75 staff, would continue through other organisations. Mr Hunt said he wanted to establish "a direct and less bureaucratic relationship with the British Film Institute" and that Government and Lottery support for film would continue.
In a statement John Woodward, CEO of the UK Film Council, called the proposal "short-sighted and potentially very damaging, especially as there is at present no roadmap setting out where the UK Film Council's responsibilities and funding will be placed in the future".
Film producer Tim Bevan, who chairs the council, said: "Abolishing the most successful film support organisation the UK has ever had is a bad decision, imposed without any consultation or evaluation. People will rightly look back on today's announcement and say it was a big mistake, driven by short-term thinking and political expediency. British film, which is one of the UK's more successful growth industries, deserves better."
19th July 2010
Oscars Foriegn Language Film Award
The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is the organisation appointed by the
American Academy to select the UK’s submission for consideration for the Foreign
Language Film Award at the 83rd American Academy Awards in 2011.
Eligible films must have been released in the UK for at least seven consecutive days to a
public paying audience beginning no earlier than 1 October 2009 and no later than 30
September 2010. No television or online transmission may have occurred before the film’s
theatrical release.
There is no requirement for entries to be in a language indigenous to the UK or to be set in
the UK. The dialogue...
The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is the organisation appointed by the
American Academy to select the UK’s submission for consideration for the Foreign
Language Film Award at the 83rd American Academy Awards in 2011.
Eligible films must have been released in the UK for at least seven consecutive days to a
public paying audience beginning no earlier than 1 October 2009 and no later than 30
September 2010. No television or online transmission may have occurred before the film’s
theatrical release.
There is no requirement for entries to be in a language indigenous to the UK or to be set in
the UK. The dialogue must be predominantly in a language or languages other than
English and accurate English subtitles are required. Creative control of the motion picture
must have been largely in the hands of citizens of the UK. For full rules go to
www.oscars.org/rulesProducers and distributors should notify BAFTA by email to
nickw@bafta.org of their
intention to submit a film by Monday 16 August.
07th July 2010
Success for film shot in Vauxhall Street, Norwich
While it's often Norwich's cobbled streets and historic quarter which often attract the attention of film crews, a fledgling director has been inspired by an urban area on the edge of the city centre.
Chris Dundon's film Bro will be one of 170 short films shown at Rushes Soho Shorts in London later this month.
Set around the Vauxhall Street area of Norwich, the 18-minute film tells the story of Simon whose brother has a form of autism and how he copes with his sibling's condition.
The film has gained global recognition and has already been screened in Beverly Hills and won a...
While it's often Norwich's cobbled streets and historic quarter which often attract the attention of film crews, a fledgling director has been inspired by an urban area on the edge of the city centre.
Chris Dundon's film Bro will be one of 170 short films shown at Rushes Soho Shorts in London later this month.
Set around the Vauxhall Street area of Norwich, the 18-minute film tells the story of Simon whose brother has a form of autism and how he copes with his sibling's condition.
The film has gained global recognition and has already been screened in Beverly Hills and won a 'special mention' from the jury at the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen - one of the oldest and most renowned film festivals in the world.
Mr Dundon, 27, from Hertfordshire, who has worked with a number of filmmakers from Norwich on the film, said: “I fell in love with Vauxhall Street and the surrounding area.
“When people think of Norwich, they don't think of the urban side of it and I thought it was the perfect location for the story so we went ahead and filmed there.
“We filmed around the Vauxhall Street area, at the basketball courts and along the A11.”
Mr Dundon teamed up with Norwich-based producer Jonathan Blagrove, who lives in Swansea Road, to create the film, which was commissioned by Screen East.
Ahead of the Rushes Soho Shorts screening on July 24, for which Bro has been shortlisted for the long form award, the film was premiered at the Beverly Hills Film Festival in April and was screened at the 36th Seattle International Film Festival and the 23rd Singapore International Film Festival.
The cast includes Ellie Paskell, who played Maxine in BBC series Waterloo Road.
Mr Dundon, who took inspiration from a school friend's own experience with an autistic sibling, added: “It's been my first commissioned short and it's incredible how well it's done. I didn't expect it to get into Beverly Hills at all and the Seattle festival is huge in the States.”
A film co-directed by Norwich graduate Jon Dunleavy, who studied at what was then called the Norwich School of Art and Design, has also been shortlisted for Rushes Soho Shorts.
Crash Bang Wallow is a bittersweet comic tale of an ex-stuntman Larry LeTan and his rise and fall from Hollywood infamy.
The festival will be held from July 21 to 30.
For more information about the festival, go to
www.sohoshorts.com
07th July 2010
Call for Applications – Docs 360
Want to win £5,000 cash and £20,000 worth of digital marketing support for your feature documentary project?
Applications are now open for Docs 360, a 9-month development programme and competition for documentary filmmakers who want to use cross-platform strategies to develop, finance, market and distribute their film. The programme is backed by Skillset’s Film Skills Fund, digital marketing agency Channel D and leading UK distributor Dogwoof and run by Initialize Films and the Digital Filmmakers’ Network.
To apply and for more information please go to
www.docs360.co.uk
Want to win £5,000 cash and £20,000 worth of digital marketing support for your feature documentary project?
Applications are now open for Docs 360, a 9-month development programme and competition for documentary filmmakers who want to use cross-platform strategies to develop, finance, market and distribute their film. The programme is backed by Skillset’s Film Skills Fund, digital marketing agency Channel D and leading UK distributor Dogwoof and run by Initialize Films and the Digital Filmmakers’ Network.
To apply and for more information please go to
www.docs360.co.uk
05th July 2010
Low Carbon and the Investment Readiness Workshop
The workshop being held on Wednesday 14th July 2010 is now full. The next available workshop will be held in Norwich during the first week in September - exact date and venue to be announced next week.
The workshop being held on Wednesday 14th July 2010 is now full. The next available workshop will be held in Norwich during the first week in September - exact date and venue to be announced next week.
18th June 2010
BSLBT Zoom Short Film Scheme for Deaf filmmakers
The BSLBT Zoom Short Film Scheme for Deaf filmmakers is running again. Zoom awardees are given £2K as well as production and post production support to make a short film in British Sign Language. Deadline is 5pm Friday 17th September.
This year also sees the launch of Zoom Focus which gives previous Zoom awardees the opportunity to win £4,000 as well as production and post production support.
Please visit
http://www.bslbt.co.uk/zoom/ for guidelines and application form.
The BSLBT Zoom Short Film Scheme for Deaf filmmakers is running again. Zoom awardees are given £2K as well as production and post production support to make a short film in British Sign Language. Deadline is 5pm Friday 17th September.
This year also sees the launch of Zoom Focus which gives previous Zoom awardees the opportunity to win £4,000 as well as production and post production support.
Please visit
http://www.bslbt.co.uk/zoom/ for guidelines and application form.
21st May 2010
Thanks to your votes ....
Thanks to your votes Screen East can now say "Congratulations" to Jon Dunleavy and Keith Wilson Singer. Three weeks ago they asked for your help and now their Digital Short, 'Crash! Bang! Wallow?' won the National Film Board of Canada Online Competition – Cannes 2010! The film was shortlisted to 10 from 1300 short films entered into the Cannes Short Film Corner and was voted for on YouTube by the public – well done to everyone involved in the film!
Thanks to your votes Screen East can now say "Congratulations" to Jon Dunleavy and Keith Wilson Singer. Three weeks ago they asked for your help and now their Digital Short, 'Crash! Bang! Wallow?' won the National Film Board of Canada Online Competition – Cannes 2010! The film was shortlisted to 10 from 1300 short films entered into the Cannes Short Film Corner and was voted for on YouTube by the public – well done to everyone involved in the film!