Filmmaking


CALLING INDEPENDENT FILMMAKERS AND VIDEO JOURNALISTS

The American News Project (http://newsproject.org) is dedicated to defending and promoting the public interest through high-quality, investigative video journalism. Our staff includes video professionals who have worked at CNN, BBC, National Geographic, PBS Frontline, Bill Moyers Journal and other respectable media outlets. Our reports (some call them mini-documentaries) regularly end up on prominent media outlets like the Huffington Post.

We are building out our network of freelance filmmakers and video journalists. ANP is run very much like a traditional magazine. Video reports are produced staff reporters and qualified freelancers. Our stories are distributed to hundreds of blogs and major media sites.
We are assembling a community of video journalists and documentary filmmakers who believe in quality, accuracy and in the transformative potential of good multimedia storytelling. Some of the most incisive reporting is produced by those who know the personalities and communities directly affected by issues and events.

If you are a documentary filmmaker or professional video journalist who would like to work with us on stories please click on the link below and fill out your info.

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/522 … jsp?key=82

We believe that these are seminal times, both in the evolution of media and the project of America. By grinding away at pernicious problems; by holding the powerful accountable; by seeking out universal stories of struggle and transcendence; by highlighting voices overlooked by mainstream outlets; by making a commitment to quality; by partnering with our peers in the independent press; and by assembling an online community of media junkies who hunger to participate, we hope to help pioneer a form of online public-interest broadcasting that is both entertaining and transformative.

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“With a click of a button, you open the door in to another world - the one in your mind. That which lurks in shadows now takes a new face, the one inside us all and only unlocked by the imagination. You have fallen into Unknown Realms”

This concerns the launch of the Unknown Realms: Japan channel on various P2P TV and web TV platforms like Vuze, Veoh, iTunes and many others, which coincides with the DVD release of 152 and Rodosha - The Laborer. Finally some of the films that I talked about previously are available on the internet for viewing.

Unknown Realms: Japan is a channel featuring a collection of short films beckoning back to the days of the Twilight Zone, produced by DK PRO (including 152 and Rodosha - The Laborer). The channel explores the mysterious, thrilling and unknown all with a Japanese twist - from psychological mysteries, to stories of haunted train tunnels, to surreal looks at the mundane, including documentaries about hidden aspects of Japan. The channel currently features short films that have screened at various film festivals around the world, including the US, Canada, Australia, Japan, and Italy. It will also feature future films of DK PRO which are currently in production. Attached is a press release for the Unknown Realms: Japan channel with details and links for the channel in all its available platforms as well as details on all the films screening on the channel and 3 films currently in production (available at http://www.dariru.com/unknownrealmspressrelease.pdf). A press kit which includes posters, production stills and images for all films can be downloaded at: http://www.dariru.com/unknownrealmspresskit.rar (14 meg compressed file)

Both 152 and Rodosha - The Laborer are now available on DVD on Amazon.com and all films are currently in negotiation for distribution in addition to being broadcast on Unknown Realms: Japan, so readers would be able to check out the films easily.
sincerely,
Darryl Knickrehm
director DK PRO
http://www.dariru.com

Being tapped to screen your film at one of the country’s top film festivals. That has to be every filmmaker’s dream. The Tribeca Film Festival 2008 runs April 23rd to May 3rd and, newcomer that it may be, after only seven years on the scene, clearly Tribeca has become one of the best places for a filmmaker’s work to be seen. The Digital Filmmaker spoke with a half dozen fortunate filmmakers whose documentaries and animations are among the many kinds of films selected this year. We particularly wanted to know what they hope or expect being included will mean for their film’s future. Call it a look not at the films themselves, but at the filmmaker’s experience. Some filmmakers have been to Tribeca before and are returning with new work. Some are experiencing the festival for the first time. All echo the sentiment of Carlos Carcas, a first timer who is coming all the way from Spain to screen his film “Old Man Bebo”at the festival.
“Just being a part of the Tribeca Film Festival in itself is an honor. As a filmmaker, it’s a wonderful opportunity to showcase one’s work in a prestigious event. When I heard the film had been accepted to compete in Tribeca, I was in a state of shock and euphoria. I always dreamed about participating in Tribeca, and to go with this film is already a prize.”
For information on the festival and its film offerings the festival’s website is at www.tribecafilmfestival.org .

For what the filmmakers have to say, please read on.


Nina Paley “Sita Sings The Blues”


Nina Paley is a returning filmmaker. Two years ago she had a short at Tribeca. One thing she hopes Tribeca will do for “Sita Sings the Blues,” a feature length, animated “breakup film” which receives its North American premiere at Tribeca, is for other festival directors to become aware of it, seeing or hearing of it there. As she explains, it’s a whole lot easier if you know other festival directors are aware of, and also already interested in your work than if you just submit.
“Sita”, which is in what she calls its festival year, screened earlier at the Berlin Film Fesitval, where it had its World Premiere, and “good things came out of Berlin.” Because of Berlin, she was invited to “a whole bunch of other festivals.” Her hope is Tribeca will do the same. And it costs a lot less, she has learned, if they invite you. There are expenses to submitting, for duplication, postage, and so on. These are smaller if festivals ask you to attend.

Paley particularly likes that Tribeca is in New York, where she lives and where she is happy all of her friends can finally see it, in a theater, with other people, in the dark. The way it should be. Being in New York also makes it easier to manage all the work that goes into presenting it. And, she confides, there are a million things to do. As with many filmmakers, money is tight. Trying to get “Sita” out into the world with no money, she can’t, for example, afford p.r. Many a filmmaker will sympathize with that challenge. At least in New York she knows some people in the press. Honor that Tribeca is, she recognizes every great thing creates new problems. She is overwhelmed trying to make all the arrangements, including making sure all the people who helped her get tickets. A friend says of her “She’s like a wolf running through the woods,” trying to do them all.

Paley has a sales rep, but is still looking for a distributor, which she also hopes will materialize because of Tribeca. She knows “Sita” is a tough sell. A niche. It’s animated, but not for kids. Looking for her best deal, the hope is Tribeca will give it “a big push.” She will also tell you she has always made art. She makes the films she does “because I want to see it. When I started I wasn’t thinking about getting into the Tribeca Film Festival. I was just thinking about the film.”
Of course, being one of the filmmakers at a major festival, she is looking forward to seeing others’ work.
What would she say to aspiring filmmakers about themselves applying to Tribeca? Her advice is simple. “Send it in. Who knows how this works. It’s a mystery.” In her words, “Of course, I’ve had more rejections in my life than acceptance.” Basically, she’s saying, all you can do is not get in. And maybe, miracle of miracles, you will.

When the Digital Filmmaker asks Paley what she got out of Tribeca the last time she was there two years ago, she doesn’t hesitate a moment. With great enthusiasm she will tell you, “They gave me a great bag of swag.” What was in it? “Final Cut Pro!” What else was in there? “Lip balm. Sunglasses. A nice bag. Who cares!” Not when the freebie bag has Final Cut Pro!

Alas, the swag bag laws have tightened. Since last she was at Tribeca there’s been a swag bag crackdown, so she doesn’t expect that again.

But a decent distribution deal would be nice.


Robert Drew “A President to Remember”

Famed documentarian Robert Drew brings an intimate look at President John Kennedy to Tribeca in his “A President to Remember.” He has been to many a festival and to Tribeca before. “What this festival and other successful festivals do… Tribeca more than most,” he tells us, “it creates a two week thriving film community. It energizes people. Broadens your viewpoints.”

Like Paley, he is aware when Tribeca selects a film then many of the other major festivals around the world want you to come. They issue invitations. So it has a multiplier effect. The festivals he cares about are the ones that feature documentaries or are all docs. Tribeca is a broad picture. Hollywood is a part of it, but documentaries are given top billing. He feels well treated there. His film gets reviewed at the head of the list.

Furthermore, he has observed, people make a festival. Good people are the secret. This particular group that works behind the scenes at Tribeca, people you never hear about, “is amazing.” A smart bunch. Some might ask, for example, why another Kennedy film. With them, he didn’t have to explain anything. They knew this is a big year for presidential politics.
The last film he had at Tribeca was of his WWII experience. Unbeknownst to him, while it was screening at the Amsterdam festival, one of Tribeca’s top people was seeing it there and when he got back to the United States, before he could call them, she called him. To Drew, that means the folks who run Tribeca are enterprising. Then he has nothing but praise for the way they handled it. They billed it prominently. Gave it good projection. Got a good audience there.

For “A President to Remember,” this year’s entry, Drew explains, this film is meant for people who didn’t experience JFK directly. He is hoping people will realize once we had a history of great presidents. Which, in his opinion, the current administration doesn’t reflect. What Tribeca is doing for him. First, they selected it. Out of the hundreds of films that are submitted, it is “good for the film that it was selected. Good that then they will show it four or five times with excellent projection, good p.r. Hopefully, it will draw crowds.” More importantly, being in the festival “would then accomplish the purpose of the film, which is to remind people of a great president” who held office at a time when we respected and admired the man in the White House. He thinks the film has a job to do. And this festival will help it do that.

We wanted to know the importance of this festival to him when he’s been in so many. And had so many successes. “Yes, I still get excited.” The film he’s working on is always the most important. And Tribeca is “an important boost.”


Dori Bernstein “Gotta Dance”

Dori Bernstein we reached in post-production, putting the finishing touches on her entry “Gotta Dance.” Two years ago, she was at Tribeca with “Show Business: The Road to Broadway, ” where it premiered, and it was “huge, fantastic, the perfect place to launch the film.” Tribeca launched it “on such a high level” and gave them an opening which attracted distributor attention and press attention. They were given a red carpet spotlight premiere. She calls that “a magical night.” The film dealt with Broadway, and as Tribeca is in New York, the Broadway community came. What happened to them at Tribeca was “very valuable to catapulting the film. As a result, we did get theatrical distribution release. It played all around the country. Now it’s out on DVD.”

Also an incredible experience is what Bernstein says was the personal handling. “Tribeca took such good care of us and the film. Even after the festival was over. They continued to be very supportive of their filmmakers.” Bernstein says the festival put word of their film in their online newsletter. Sent email blasts when it was released, telling people where it was playing. Helped to publicize it throughout its life.

Now she returns with “Gotta Dance.” “Gotta Dance” is a world premiere. She is ecstatic that she got in. Especially after only sending in a rough cut. She felt from Day One that Tribeca was the perfect place for her latest film. It was her dream to get in. But she is well aware, “This is a tough one to get into. At the end of the day, either it fits what they need or it doesn’t, even if you’ve been in before.” But she also knows the festival had confidence in her — seeing just a rough cut — “that it would turn out well and be finished on time.”

She wanted to and is thrilled to be at Tribeca, not only because it is such a spectacular festival, but also “because everyone is here.” Meaning everyone in the film is in New York area. Her senior hip hop dancers and the New Jersey Nets, “which is what makes the screening so special. The lights will come up at the end and the cast of the movie is going to be there.” Up on stage. What a moment. Not only will they get to see the film while the audience does, but the audience will get to see her stars.

Her dream is for every distributor to see the film, fall in love with it and want it desperately.

Tribeca makes that possible.


Douglas Tirola “An Omar Broadway Film”


Douglas Tirola is new as a filmmaker to Tribeca, but not new to Tribeca itself. He’s been before, wearing a different hat. Taking pitches in the All Access program, not screening his own film. This is the first doc he’s directed.
For this particular film, “this was THE festival we wanted to go to.” Tirola always pictured it being at Tribeca. For a few reasons. One of which is that “An Omar Broadway Film” takes place almost entirely in Newark and East Orange, right across the river.

Another because, after being involved for six years with the All Access program, he feels a relationship with the festival. “I think they do a great job. They make you feel they are making a long-term commitment to you.” He feels they really want the movie to go where it can go — beyond the festival circuit. Tirola describes a kindness, feeling treated like family, with all the “support for us and for the film.” He thinks that’s unique. He’s been in other festivals. It’s not always that way. “Since the movie was accepted the level of and amount of support from different people at the festival is extraordinary.”

The Digital Filmmaker talked to Tirola the morning after a pre-Tribeca event. What he found remarkable was that questions from the various festival workers went beyond their immediate area of responsibility. Someone in p.r. might ask about distribution and vice versa. People had actually seen the film. Dozens of films are in the festival and he could see they actually knew his movie. Had actually watched more than the first five minutes of his film (and the others). They could talk about the movie. And because they had actually seen it, Tirola feels they will be better prepared to support it.
His takeaway. Instead of solely being concerned with how the festival fares, they seem to care about what the festival can do for the film. Tirola believes the festival people genuinely care and want his movie to “find its home” not only at but after the festival. For him he will always feel “this connection to Tribeca.” For anything that needs being done, “There are six people helping me, far beyond what does happen at the festival itself.”
His expectations beyond the festival? He has a couple.

“We’re just like a lot of movies. We got it made far enough to submit to festivals and because it got accepted, now that it’s in, we went to final production.” Now that it’s in finished form, with that boost from the festival, obviously, he hopes for theatrical distribution. “The goal is to find a distributor who best understands the film and will get it out to an audience.” And here again, Tribeca is a help. Tirola hasn’t “been to all the festivals in the world, but I will say because Tribeca is in New York City, you get the New York industry people.” More of them are here than most other places that hold festivals. Then there is a further wrinkle. The uniqueness of Tribeca being in New York City, plus the support of the people behind the festival, means you get more diversity in the audience — a great mix of industry people, film devotees and just regular folks. People in the business get to see the film at screenings with regular folks, not just the crew who flew out to see the movie, and “being in New York, where the audience and the crowd is a little tougher, if the movie plays in that bit tougher room and a potential distributor sees the audience is on the side of the movie, that’s an advantage.” After all, Tirola is trying to show there is an audience out there for “An Omar Broadway Film.” Being at Tribeca make that happen.

“An Omar Broadway Film” is about, as Tirola puts it, “a guy who is in prison.” So he can’t be there. But another main character is his mother. A woman who lives in a modest house in East Orange, New Jersey — she gets to be there. Tirola says, “If for some reason this is the only premiere the movie ever has, it’s important for us that the mom be there and it be special.” And Tribeca helps make it special, even going so far as to help them find a place after the screening to have a party.

At the end of the day, “It’s a documentary. This is probably the biggest opening and biggest stage it will have.”


Andy Abrahams Wilson “Under Our Skin”

Andy Abraham Wilson is a first timer. Tribeca is the place where he’s launching his doc, “Under Our Skin” and he calls it “the best venue for this film.” Partly that’s because of the subject matter. “Under Our Skin” is about the Lyme Disease epidemic. And New York and the Tri-state area were a hot spot epidemic area. Hence, a perfect place to premiere.
He hasn’t been there yet, but already he feels what the other filmmakers describe, under the heading, “treating us well and they really care.”

Wilson, of course, hopes for sold out crowds. He’s excited about getting this film out to the public. He’s also excited also being asked to be on a panel, Behind the Scenes. Only three filmmakers will be on that panel and he’s the only non-fiction filmmaker.

Being on a panel can only help. As any filmmaker knows, going to a festival is all about visibility and awareness. Wilson takes it further. Creating awareness and buzz about the film is important. “All filmmakers want to create awareness and buzz about their film.” But he also wants to “create buzz and awareness about the issue. The Lyme Disease epidemic.” His sister had it. He thought she was malingering. This film, he quips is “ penance for the way he treated her.” More earnestly, he had a friend who got sick, then sicker and sicker, with a mysterious illness. Eventually she was seriously ill. He was very concerned. She was very concerned. Many wrong diagnoses followed, until, finally, the diagnosis of Lyme Disease. So the film is as much about the issue. And the issue is personal.

So, it seems, even for a newcomer, is the relationship to Tribeca.

“Everyone wants their film to do well, “ he reminds us. “Tribeca is a big festival. Lots of people are coordinating. It feels like they our holding our hands.” Compared to other festivals, “they seem to have an investment… an engagement with the film.”

“It feels like they are holding our hands.” Wilson has been to other festivals. He doesn’t think all others get that treatment. “Under Our Skin” has a prime screening time. He, too, cites the newsletter, tracking the film after its play.
And, of course, there’s that panel discussion.

Eileen Douglas is a broadcast journalist turned independent documentary filmmaker. Former 1010 WINS New York anchor/reporter and correspondent for “ABC-TV’s Lifetime Magazine,” she is the author of “Rachel and the Upside Down Heart,” and co-producer of the films “My Grandfather’s House” and “Luboml:My Heart Remembers.” She can be reached at www.douglas-steinman.com.

“A President to Remember: In the Company of John F. Kennedy.” Produced and Directed by Robert Drew
Narrated by Alec Baldwin

Call it nostalgia. Call it remembrance. Call it a reminder of how things were before John F. Kennedy was assassinated forty-five years ago in 1963. In every way, you will be right. Today, President John F Kennedy is a man steeped in myth, especially to today’s generation and probably for anyone under fifty years old. He is an icon unlike almost any other American president except for possibly Abraham Lincoln. Robert Drew’s latest film is not for the cynical, the know-it-alls, or those who will say, I’ve been there, done that. It is an unabashed, affectionate look at John F Kennedy. Few people really know anything about him except the obvious.

Almost fifty years ago Robert Drew helped develop hand-held cameras that allowed him and his crews to enter, as flies on the wall, the inner world of Kennedy – with his permission, of course — as he campaigned for president, then won the Oval Office, and then went through a host of crises that he solved with a dedicated staff. For this film, Drew culled highlights of Kennedy’s life from the four major films he directed about him during those heady years. In “A President to Remember” we watch JFK campaign for president. We witness speeches he made – especially portions of the one about his Catholicism and how it would not affect how he would govern the country. We see excerpts of John Kennedy and Richard Nixon in the debate that changed the tone of the campaign and then helped to turn the election his way.

Importantly, Drew and his cameras had access to the Oval Office during two major confrontations when Kennedy was president. The major foreign crisis was, of course, when the Soviet Union under Nikita Khrushev moved missiles into Cuba. Here we see JFK interacting with his advisors, not panicking, being thoughtful, and being careful because one false step and the world could have seen nuclear war. Kennedy was able to face down the Soviet Union and cause Khrushev and his military to remove the missiles, thus allowing the world to breathe more easily without the possibility of nuclear war.

The other powerful set of scenes that take place in the Oval Office were those during the time when Governor George Wallace of Alabama refused to allow black students to enter the University of Alabama. Driven by Attorney General Robert Kennedy and ably assisted by Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach, it was an epic diplomatic battle over state rights between Alabama, in the person of George Wallace, and the Federal government over who had control of desegregation. Troops massed. Large crowds gathered. The nation was tense because Wallace threatened to stand in the schoolhouse door and not admit the two African-American students. We observe the Kennedy brothers being calm and resolute in the face of a defiant George Wallace. We watch as they face down Governor Wallace and finally win. The two students are admitted. President Kennedy goes on TV that night and sets the tone for future government commitments to civil rights. I seriously doubt that any president today would allow such intimate access to show the highest in government at work. I have to wonder what the result of President George Bush going to war with Iraq would have had, had at least some of his discussions been recorded for posterity.

Though the film does not take us through everything in Kennedy’s life, we do get to see him on trips to the Berlin Wall, and his journey to Ireland. We see the sometimes awkward grace of Jackie Kennedy, how she supported him in her role as First Lady, the intimate looks she gives him, and her ability to win people with her smile and her gentle charm.

Is this film worth seeing? If you know very little about John F Kennedy and his presidency, the answer is yes. If you think you know more than you do, the answer is still yes. If you know in detail everything about JFK, the answer is a strong yes. We will probably never see the likes of John F Kennedy again. The film refreshes our memory. Rush to wherever it is playing. It is not comprehensive. It cannot be. It is selective. In these selections, however enough of JFK’s intellect, his wit, his caring attitude, his humanity and his style show through, if even only in small doses, to make the movie worth your time when it comes to a theater near you. This is especially so with the Democratic Party campaign for its candidate for president nearly over and the campaign for a new president about to being.

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Zacuto’s Letus Studio Handheld Package [http://www.zacuto.com/Letus_studio_handheld_kit.htm] includes the Letus35 Shallow Depth of Field Adapter [http://www.adapterplace.com/content/view/21/5/lang,en/] plus all the Zacuto brand hardware necessary to achieve a balanced and completely quick-releasable (Zacuto trademark) shooting outfit that is quick to setup and fast to move about on location.

The DOF adapter is a powerful tool, allowing inexpensive DV, HDV and HD cameras with small CCD’s
to capture a shallow depth-of-field to achieve a 35mm motion picture look. One interesting benefit is that while the DOF is very similar to 35mm film cameras; with the 1/3″ pickup area, the field-of-view is much wider. This is a huge benefit to independent filmmakers because they are typically on location vs. a studio and need the widest field-of-view (wide angle) they can get. The Letus35 Extreme adapter is an affordable yet high quality unit which is easy to use and will fit all cameras.

“After extensive tests, I’ve found that Letus35 Extreme loses the least amount of light of any of the DOF adapters on the market (including P+S-Technik & the Movie Tube)” says, Jens Bogehegn, Product Designer/Technician Zacuto USA.

“We invented a new part just for the Letus35 called the Z-Riser [http://www.zacuto.com/Z-Riser.htm]. When using a DOF adapter two issues are important. Balance & Support [http://www.zacuto.com/Letus_07.htm]. These setups tend to be very front heavy so designing the system with balance is critical for both handheld and tripod use. Second, support is key to your equipment lasting. Electronics are delicate, in a Zacuto setup, the electronic components including the Letus35 just sit with no pressure on them on the Zacuto rig. The Zacuto setup has to take all of the stresses or damage will occur to the electronic components.” Says, Steve Weiss, Product Designer/Sales Zacuto USA.

The Zacuto Letus35 Extreme case [http://www.zacuto.com/Letus_Zacuto_case.htm] is the first of its kind to be able to put the entire built Letus35 setup in a case fully assembled. It could take 30 minutes to assemble all of the parts of your rig each time you set it up. “The less you take the components on and off the less breakage you will have. Plus, you can come out of the case and shoot within 1 minute, who wouldn’t want that?” says, Steve Weiss, Product Designer/Sales, Zacuto USA.

“Our handheld kit for the Letus35 adapter uses more than a dozen of Zacuto’s best products, including our latest (Version 3) Universal Baseplate [http://store.zacuto.com/product.php?productid=30&cat=0&page=1] and Z-grips [http://store.zacuto.com/product.php?productid=69&cat=0&page=1] ” says Steve Weiss, Zacuto’s Co-Designer/Sales Director. “Z-Grips give you that Zacuto low hand position that DP’s say is much less fatiguing when shooting for many hours. Plus, the handgrips themselves fully articulate for further comfort.”

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The Tribeca Film Festival was founded seven years ago after the 9/11 attacks to revitalize lower Manhattan through a celebration of film and culture. Since its founding, the Festival has generated more then $425 million in economic activity for New York City. It has been a home to more than 950 filmmakers debuting stories from around the corner to around the globe.

Each year, the strength of the film program has increased. The acclaimed documentary, Taxi to the Dark Side, which premiered and was acquired at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival, was just nominated for Best Documentary at the 2008 Academy Awards. Another 2008 Academy Award nominee, Salim Baba, had its North American debut at the 2007 Festival and is now up for Best Documentary Short Subject. The 2007 Festival also featured more than 30 films that received distribution.

SECAUCUS, NJ (September 7, 2007) – Panasonic introduced today a 32GB P2 solid-state memory card for its popular line of P2 HD and P2 solid-state camcorders and decks. With the availability of the 32GB P2 card in November, Panasonic will have quadrupled the storage capacity of its solid-state memory card in just this year, providing HD recording time greater than most tape-based and disc-based systems.

The 32GB P2 card, model AJ-P2C032RG, will have a suggested list price of $1,650 and is scheduled for initial deliveries in November. The new 32 P2 card will be offered in addition to the 16GB P2 card that has been shipping since May.

Camcorders equipped with the new 32GB P2 card will offer greater recording capacity than tape-based and disc-based systems, and offer the proven benefits of no-moving-parts reliability and fast IT file-based workflow. With five 32GB P2 cards installed, the AJ-HPX3000 and HPX2000 P2 HD camcorders can record for up to 2.5 hours (over 3 hours in 24p) in AVC-Intra 100 or DVCPRO HD and 5 hours (over 6.5 hours in 24p) in AVC-Intra 50 or DVCPRO 50.

Panasonic’s P2 card is based on ultra-reliable, solid-state memory, consisting of four SD cards, like those now used in digital still cameras, packaged in a rugged, die-cast frame that weighs only 0.099 lbs (45 grams). This convenient card has four times the capacity and four times the transfer speed of a single SD card. The P2 card is reusable and connects instantly with laptops and major non-linear editing systems to eliminate the time-consuming task of digitizing.

The P2 card is resistant to impact (up to 1,500G), vibration (up to 15G), shock, dust and environmental extremes including temperature changes. It operates in temperatures from -4° to 176°F (-20 to 60°C), and can be stored in temperatures from -40° to 176°F (-40 to 80°C). Unlike tapes and discs, the P2 card has no rotating or contact parts. The solid-state P2 memory card can transfer data at speeds up to 640Mbps to provide the professional user with fast, easy operation. Compared to tape or disc, P2 acquisition requires no media consumption, resulting in tremendous savings in media costs as well as environmental benefits.

The new 32GB card is fully compatible with the current 16GB P2 card, so users who’ve upgraded their P2 product(s) and computer system for 16GB operation are ready for 32GB operation. For P2 users who haven’t completed this upgrade, it is a requirement to take advantage of 32GB operation.

I am about to tell you about a new and extraordinary documentary film, “White Light Black Rain” that is currently playing on HBO.

The film documents what many young people probably do not know and many others have pushed out of their minds. It is about the destruction of two cities in Japan at the end of World War II. This is what happened. In an effort to end the war against Japan, on August 6, 1945, the United States dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. One hundred forty thousand died. As if that were not enough, and because the United States did not get the quick response it wanted – unconditional surrender – on August 9 it dropped another atom bomb on Nagasaki, killing 70,000 more Japanese. Japan’s unconditional surrender followed almost immediately after the second bomb fell. This year is the 62nd anniversary of the destruction of those two cities. Over the years since the bombs fell, another 160,000 Japanese died from the effects of the bombs, mostly from radiation poisoning and any number of other maladies associated with what the bomb brought on those fateful days.

Directed, written and produced by veteran filmmaker Steven Okazaki, the film is, “White Light Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. ” Though it first aired on August 6, 2007, it is still playing at various times on HBO, so check the listings. When I learned about the documentary I did not want to see it. Over the years, I had seen enough of the remarkable and horrifying pictures of the destruction, of the dead, and of those treated by medical teams soon after the bombings. I did not want to relive the horror. There is enough horror around us everyday. I did not need more. One night recently, however, I made myself watch the film, and as difficult as it was, I am glad I did. It should be required viewing for everyone.

Not everybody in Hiroshima and Nagasaki died on those momentous days. Many people were vaporized, yes vaporized. Not everyone was burned beyond recognition, though many were. There were survivors, many of whom were children at the time. The film is as much their story as it is the story of those who died. It is also the story of personal courage that allowed some of these survivors to stay alive, perhaps to tell how they lived in spite of how they suffered, and still do. Their powerful first person accounts of their lives and how they survived against tremendous odds are riveting. Yet, the telling of the stories is quiet, understated and dignified. Possibly the reason some lived through the conflagration is to be able to remind us, in a film such as this, how nuclear weapons can easily destroy cities and the people who live in them.

The images from those first days after the bomb fell are searing. It is hard to believe there was so much film, so detailed a photographic record following the mass destruction of those two cities. Watching the old film ably mixed with the contemporary interviews and then looking at the powerful, though simple drawings used as connective tissue in the early part of the film I found it hard not to weep.

Despite the images and reliving the horror in words and images, the film is unpretentious. It does not scream or raise its voice about the obscenity of nuclear warfare unleashed on the world August 6 and August 9, 1945. The pictures and testimonies, including those of a few Americans involved in the bombings, are so strong the film does not have to shout at us about how unspeakable the bombings were. That people could survive these many years after near total destruction and continue lives of unimagined difficulty makes almost many other survivor stories pale by comparison. In the end, I found the film uplifting.

PLYMOUTH, MN, USA (June 27, 2007) — Primera Technology, Inc., the world’s
leading developer and manufacturer of CD, DVD and Blu-ray Disc duplication and
printing equipment, and TitleMatch Entertainment Group (OTCBB:PCLI), an
innovator of on-demand content distribution, today announced they will be the
first companies to publicly demonstrate a completely functional and fully-
integrated DVD-on-Demand solution that includes Qflix copy protection from
Sonic Solutions. The demonstration will take place at the Entertainment Supply
Chain Academy’s (ESCA) Digital Supply Chain Developers Conference, July 27-28,
2007, in Los Angeles, California.TitleMatch DVD On-Demand service is a new burn-on-demand service for retailers that allows customers to purchase DVD movies and home entertainment directly from a touch screen. Customer selected content is automatically recorded and printed using a Primera Bravo-Series Disc Publisher for immediate delivery at point-of-sale. The TitleMatch service expands product availability in the
retail channel and eliminates physical inventory.

Complete TitleMatch DVD-on-Demand systems with a local server, external storage, touch screen, DVD case printer and Primera Bravo-Series Disc Publisher start at $4995.

For more info go to www.primera.com

COMEDY CENTRAL is partnering with AtomFilms and once again putting out a challenge to its audience with the launch of the second annual “COMEDY CENTRAL Test Pilots,” an online competition in search of the next big broadband series, it was announced today by Lou Wallach, senior vice president, original programming and development, COMEDY CENTRAL. Today also marks the comedycentral.com series debut of “Awesome Friends” — last year’s “COMEDY CENTRAL Test Pilots” Grand Prize winner.

Live action, animation, sketch or hidden camera – any format is acceptable. The only prerequisite…be funny! COMEDY CENTRAL and AtomFilms are putting their fans to task and asking you to bring it on! Would-be show creators can upload a pilot and possibly download $5000.00 along with the potential of an online development deal with comedycentral.com. In addition, the winning pilot will air on COMEDY CENTRAL’s late night series “Web Shows.”

“COMEDY CENTRAL’s Test Pilots” will accept submissions June 1 through July 10, 2007. COMEDY CENTRAL has partnered with AtomFilms as the exclusive destination to upload and share their one-to-five-minute pilots. During the competition, COMEDY CENTRAL will choose a series of “staff picks” and those pilots will be featured on both comedycentral.com and AtomFilms. The panel of judges, which consists of COMEDY CENTRAL and AtomFilms executives, will narrow down the entries to four semi-finalists. Viewers will then vote online at comedycental.com for their favorite pilot.

The grand prize winner, as determined by the online voting, will receive $5000.00 and the potential for a development deal with COMEDY CENTRAL to produce an episodic broadband series. Last year’s winner, “Awesome Friends” was signed for a six episode broadband series deal. The web show made its online series debut on May 15 on comedycentral.com

Log-on to http://www.comedycentral.com/events/test_pilots/ or http://testpilots.atomfilms.com for more information about “COMEDY CENTRAL’s Test Pilots” including requirements for entry.

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