Editor's Notes
The view from here
WE tv Asia runs wedding marathon for Valentine's Day
Andrea Wong leaves Lifetime Entertainment Services
Canadians and Americans honor Black History Month with doc screening
Canada's Citytv picks up Seinfeld's 'The Marriage Ref'
SBS commissions two formats from ITV Studios Global Entertainment
Endemol names EVP of acquisitions for North America
Waterlife wins multimedia award
Beyond to bring Cream's 'I Could Do That' to MIP
Breakthrough sells 125 hours
Discovery Health to mark Rare Disease Day with Disease Detectives
On 'The Virtual Revolution'
Johnny Depp puts on director's hat for doc on Keith Richards
'Fog of War' editor killed in hit-and-run
CBC doc examines mental effects of marijuana
Chimps manning cameras for BBC doc
L.A. Times pays tribute to Larry 'L.A.' Johnson
Good year for docs at Sundance
Redford hypes the future of docs
Participant and EW team up to ask Sundance directors "your" questions
"Balloon Boy" doc director believes film will clear Heene's nameThe view from here
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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.
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