Editor's Notes
The view from here
ITV hires new factual controller
Lion Television brings twist to property factual
New VP of Production at A. Smith
Jon & Kate Plus 8 scores big with wedding
Leopard UK & USA add heads of production
Off the Fence produces two shark films for Nat Geo Int
Whale Wars gets top ratings for Animal Planet
AETN finalizes deals with German broadcasters
Oscar's shortlisted docs announced
Reel Asian Film Fest announces winners
No Religulous nomination? Blasphemy
Hip-hop doc explores misogyny of the genre
Activist blogger attempts to boycott Sundance
Salon's O'Hehir sees same old docu-Oscar problem
Indie Films on Amazon
NY Times reports on risky Turkish doc
In-depth talk of upcoming Obama doc
NBA star pitches Darfur doc
Exclusive Remembrance Day film on NFB site
UK audience numbers growingOur take on current and past film and TV projects
Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Jan 1, 2008 |
Reading your piece on Britdoc '07 in your last issue, we were tempted to conclude that you must have been at the wrong event. Did you get lost in Oxford?
Our team and delegates agreed it was an even better event than our fantastic first year. We had just as many delegates despite the biblical flood warnings.
Our pitch forum was stuffed with major international funders including Nancy Abraham from HBO, Cara Mertes from Sundance Institute, Christine Lubrano from IFC, Liesl Copland from Netflix, and Andrea Meditch from Discovery Films called it "the best I have ever attended. Overall, it was three of the most productive days of the year." Our pitchers included filmmakers Henry Singer, Lucy Walker, Tom Roberts and artist Issac Julien.
You mentioned last year's sponsor Nokia had not returned, but omitted to say that they had been replaced, thank you very much, by Stella Artois.
You also chose not to ask our festival director about the event's art theme - exhibitions dotted the venue and artists such as Turner winners Gillian Wearing, Dinos Chapman and Jeremy Deller joined our juries.
But wait, there's more: we had the UK premieres of Kim Longinotto's Hold Me Tight, Let Me Go as well as We Are Together, The Devil Came on Horseback, Manda Bala and In the Shadow of the Moon (a film which was born as a feature project at our festival last year).
Most importantly, our legendary live punk rock karaoke party returned - perhaps that's why one delegate called us "better than Glastonbury" on the feedback form. Sheffield was better than ever. So, come on realscreen, it's time to start to recognize the exciting things happening to UK doc events.
Jess Search, Britdoc
Oh, and we are delighted to confirm that the dates for the next trailblazing Britdoc are July 23 to 25. Cheers.
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