Editor's Notes
The view from here
ITV Studios NY signs deal with Joseph Livecchi
Screen Australia's Indigenous Department head leaves
Screen Australia revises documentary programs
September Films returns to the 'Exterminators' for A&E
Outright sells U.S. 'Who Do You Think You Are' to eight territories
Babelgum Online Film Festival open for entries
BBC4 taps Icon Films to mark 50th anniversary of 'Born Free'
'Rainbow Nation 2010' doc comes to MIPTV
Bravo bumping up original programming by 20% this year
Darlow Smithson brings Underwear Bomber to Discovery
OWN adds to its executive team
Passing up cable TV to watch online
Documentary maker analyses ethics in edit suite
Actor and 'Two Coreys' star Corey Haim dies
Mayor of Taiji, Japan protests 'The Cove' Oscar win
Oscar nod doesn't guarantee increased audiences for docs
Huffington Post talks Oscar docs
Founder of Babelgum and Fastweb arrested
BBC to make major cuts: report
Wildlife filmmaker Chris Palmer says to look, but not touch after SeaWorld deathThe view from here
Random musings on the non-fiction biz
Our take on current and past film and TV projects
Industry experts offer their take
| by: | Feb 7, 2001 |
"In 1970, we dreamed of the year 2000. Today, can we dream of 2030?" That's the question that got the ball rolling for RTBF producer Bill Binnemans in Belgium, whose new three-part series, Memoires d'Avenir, will launch in April. It is a humorous documentary essay on how we see the future, coproduced by RTBF, France 3, TSR in Switzerland, Tele-Quebec and RDI in Canada. The budget was US$1 million and was funded entirely by the public broadcasters.
What's unique is the series reuses archives from an old '70s show by David Lachterman and Louis Boxus, Photographie du Futur - a 10-part series that looked through the clairvoyant lenses of soothsaying experts into the year 2000. "Most of what they expected to happen did, but not in the way they thought," says Binnemans, who wondered how the same type of people see the future today.
"Reusing this programming is like opening up a will 30 years later," Binnemans notes. One returning interviewee, Professor Zbigniew Brzezinski of Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., is asked the same questions, only 30 years later. Old black-and-white footage is mixed with new color images to create a montage. Each show segment has its own topic and color theme: blue for "Living", green for "Producing" and red for "Communicating".
Two of three programs are now complete and the third will be ready by mid-March. Memoires will premiere on RTBF first, in April, and follow as local programming in Switzerland, France and Canada.
Now in its second year, The Factual Entertainment Forum: The Real Deal brings stakeholders in the reality TV/factual entertainment industry together for a day and half of inspiration, discussion about the current state of reality/factual TV and where it’s going, and of course, networking.
Register today for the Factual Entertainment Forum for only US$450* (includes admission to conference and the Factual Entertainment Awards presentation).
Register online or by calling Joel Pinto at 1-416-408-2300 ext. 650.
Early Bird offer expires on Friday, March 26, 2010.
Privacy
About realscreen
Advertising
Feedback