Brooklyn's Answer To SXSW? Complete With A DIY Film Festival!!

by Ted Hope | April 5, 2011 3:00 AM
6 Comments

The democratization of culture and the tools to create and share it is definitely been one of the more exciting trends of the recent past. We see it in all spheres and aspects of our daily life, but what symbolizes it best? Many friends and pundits characterize it as a dumbing down, but I truly perceive it as quite the opposite. People everywhere are asking all of us to look and reach up, to aspire to more, to inspire each of us to cross into new realms.

Maybe this is most felt on the streets of Austin during SXSW (although the committed might nominate Burning Man), but it is refreshing to know that NYC is not going to abandon the terrain of the wild, weird, honest, and true to that Texas town. We've got on own thing going down in Brooklyn.

Brooklyn has emerged as a new creative epicenter of culture, and Northside is the festival that curates this talent into a 4-day experience of Music, Art, Film, and Ideas, showcasing the best regional and national talent all within the walkable radius encompassed by Williamsburg and Greenpoint. It's June 16 -19th and I plan to be there. In fact, I will be one of the judges of the film component. But it is not just film, per se. It is lo-fi, hi-ambition, DIY variety.

DIY filmmaking is very much a part of this mission. It’s now a given that many of the most exciting films at major American festivals are the product of a handful of friends working on a shoestring (some of them right here in Brooklyn), and it’s time festivals gave these films the dedicated platform they deserve.

Last year, with the first-ever Northside Film Festival, copresenters like Rooftop Films, IFC, the Brooklyn Academy of Music and Film Comment screened exciting local and upcoming films; this year, alongside these special feature presentations, Northside's new DIY Film Competition will shine a spotlight on the exciting new voices working with the materials at hand.

The submissions guidelines:

The L Magazine presents: The Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Film Competition, Northside Festival's first juried screening series. Open to all filmmakers with ingenuity and a hands-on approach, the winners will receive an exclusive screening with Rooftop Films plus cash and equipment rentals! For more information on how to submit your own dynamic short or brilliant feature before the May 1 deadline hits, please visit northsidefestival.com and click "Submit Your Film." The films must have been made after January 1, 2008.

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6 Comments

  • Zak Forsman | June 9, 2011 3:45 AMReply

    Well, wouldn't you know it. :) I submitted HEART OF NOW and it was selected for this fest. And i am indeed honored to be a part of it. We play on the closing day of the fest, Sunday, June 19 at 5pm. SCHEDULE - http://is.gd/5dkT9V

  • Zak Forsman | April 8, 2011 5:38 AMReply

    The intentions behind this fest seem noble. So I submitted. And I'd be honored to be selected. End of story.

  • Moritz Rechenberg | April 7, 2011 8:23 AMReply

    For better or worse, what finds an audience, deserves it. I understand if pundits are afraid they're getting the rug pulled out under their feet, but I find it highly presumptuous to call a proactive, engaged, culturally curious crowd as "dumb".

  • Sujewa | April 6, 2011 3:41 AMReply

    Sounds swell - thanks for spreading the word Ted, have not heard of this fest before.

  • cold reality | April 6, 2011 3:03 AMReply

    Did you know that other people besides hipsters live in Brooklyn? It's got an enormous Jewish community, circus performance houses, a large gay culture, a large African population, and much more. This film festival is open to the public.

  • Hipsters Suck | April 5, 2011 8:12 AMReply

    Good god, these damn hipsters multiply like gremlins and keep forming their own little exlclusive festivals. When will this stop? This festival sounds dumb. If you don't wear flannel shirts, skinny jeans, smell like shit, drink PBR, have an ironic mustache, or ride a single gear bike then you probably won't be welcome at this festival. If you don't make boring, smug, aesthetically displeasing art, then don't bother submitting. The pretension of this fest is quite disgusting. Guess what Brooklyn, you aren't the cultural center of America, you just think you are.

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