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First Teaser Trailer + a surprise on the horizon.

"El Cosmonauta" Teaser 1 (ESP) from Riot Cinema on Vimeo.



Here it is, finally.

The first Teaser Trailer of The Cosmonaut.
This teaser has been created ex profeso and none of it's images will appear in the resulting movie.

Our producers had already seen it but we hadn't made it public yet. :P Other people probably remember the Making Of. We told you about it here.



 In a week, the remaining 3 and a big surprise.

Actor: Carlos Martínez-Abarca

Regarding visual work, Daniel Torrelló took the picture with a Canon 5D Markll and a 50mm 1.8 Canon objective, Angel Trancón and Ezquiel Romero made the titles and Juan Cabrera from FilmBakers took charge of the colour corrections with a Mistika machine.

Miki Ávila was our uncomplaining best boy.

Voice over: Jonathan Mellor
Sound has been incredibly recreated by Rubén Durán.

The chilling song is by Cumie  (who donates the breathing noises aswell) together with Mariyana and Sjaak and it's called 'Didge Mystic'¨)

Creative Commons [BySA] PLUS.
(+) The song is BySha Non-Commercial (that is, you'll only be able to use it to create pieces of work derivated from The Cosmonaut)
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The Cosmonaut goes to Alicante

 ubiquitous   (From Latin.  Everywhere)



Being or seeming to be everywhere at the same time.

A term appliable only to ultrareal things... and the team of The Cosmonaut. How would you explain our simultaneous presence in two conferences then?

Yeah, you've perfectly understood. While a delegation will be at FICOD (the poor things, they are having a party at Sala Vanitas later...), some of us are going to the beach during the week. We won't be sunbathing (OK, maybe just for a while :P); we'll be at CAMON, a technological space for creation and interaction located in Alicante.

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This thing wasn't born yesterday. We've been their loyal fans since we found out about their existence a few months ago. During all this time, the racket has become bigger and they have achieved the creation of a cultural location with workshops, conferences, exhibitions, films, multimedia, photography, etc. All of them incredibly interesting. And if this isn't enough for you, we invite you for more: they are big evangelizers of Creative Commons, new technologies and mainly, the Internet.


And here comes the wonderful thing: a month and a while ago, we were contacted by the production company Amiconi to make us a proposal we couldn't refuse: presenting our project at the CAMON facilities. After the regular formalities (basically gaining conciousness and cleaning our dribbling), we gave them a big YES.

So ladies and gentlemen from the regions of Valencia and Murcia, you have date this Wednesday -November the 18th- at 19:00, at CAMON Alicante. What? Is this invitation not enough for you? Do we need to add that we've some very juicy surprises in store for the occassion?

CAMON Alicante (Av. del Doctor Ramón y Cajal 5)

We'll be waiting for you!

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NOTE: If you're still dazed and confused with this ubiquity thing, let us reveal our tricky trick so you can attend bot conferences too: streaming. That's it, you can follow the CAMON conferece here and the FICOD one here.

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'We could have saved it, but we didn't'

age1.jpgOver a week ago, the world premiere of The Age of Stupid took place. The film is one of the biggest international examples of crowdfunding applied to film making. This full-length documentary, directed by Franny Armstrong, was possible thanks to the investment of its 223 producers and has been shown in over 500 cinemas distributed all over the world. This is a true precedent for the films following this funding model. In fact, you can find a guide to crowd fund your film in the website: How To Crowd Fund Your Film.
 
The film reflects on today's passive attitude towards the imminent change in our climate from the perspective of an archiver (Pete Postlethwaite) who lives in the year 2055 in a devastated world, watching images of our time and asking why nobody did anything to avoid this tragedy. If you missed the premiere, don't worry, the film is available for free for a month, so you can watch online here.
 
First impressions are being very positive, even if the majority of them praise the market model over the film contents. Jon Reiss brilliantly explains this in his article The Age of Stupid Is the Future of Film.
 
 
Even though it's about the future of humanity; this film is equally or even more important for representing the future of Cinema, of film culture and its marketing and distribution.

age2.jpg
Riot Cinema Collective was at the Madrid premiere and our colleague Gabriela tells us her impressions too:
 

Since we found out about the existence of The Age of Stupid, the film became a wonderful role model for the team of Cosmonaut. The way in which the project was presented in their website, the thermometers which they used to represent what they had achieved and what they had left, the generosity in wanting to share with the audience and with other film makers how to carry out similar initiatives, the amount of people who they got to move and motivated to participate in the project. All this wasn't but inspiring us. After all, The Age of Stupid, an indie documentary, had succeeded in doing what only Hollywood-endorsed films -and mainly, the giant marketing engines which normally accompany them- had achieved: a worldwide premiere in cinemas on the same day.
 
It wasn't necessary to go that far: the documentary had already achieved what any indie film today which adventures into the use of alternative production and distribution is longing for: to involve and move its audience and transmit this to others at the same time. Director Franny Armstrong, unintentionally became the best case study of a film maker who successfully achieves to use the new tools and means of communication with which the Internet provides creators, so that their message can have an echo and more impact.
 
What's the problem? Expectations are huge. And the possibility of fulfilling them is so small. I saw the documentary which they presented for The Guardian a day before the premiere and I thought I was about to see a film which would change my life. Maybe I was too naïve, or maybe the documentary wasn't half as good as it promised to be. I know that, just like me, many others felt disappointed. This could be harsh criticism, but it's rather a call to action for all those indie film makers who try to spread their projects through similar scenarios: their films don't rise to the buzz generated around them. This could be a very off-putting start, but I actually think that it's a sensational challenge. The consequence of having a good offer of films is that you create a demanding audience and this can only be a positive thing for the future of cinema.
 
  
Nevertheless, I have to admit that the people behind The Age of Stupid understood or at least, they have made us understand, that showing a film in a cinema isn't only another stop in the traditional chain of film exhibition and distribution. Film projections are to film makers what concerts are to musicians: the collective enjoyment of something extraordinary and unique. The new means of communication, in spite of what many people think, aren't fighting with films in cinemas, they won't make these disappear. On the contrary, they will force the experience of going to the cinema to be revaluated, the experience of seeing a film in a theatre full of strangers, a theatre in the dark where we are all seeing the same thing but the feelings caused in each one of us are unique and unrepeatable.
 
Being a film maker today is incredibly exciting. But being a cinema-loving spectator is even more exciting. In a way, The Age of Stupid is a little taste for this. And the truth is, even though it lacks many things, it still tastes really, really good.
 
Definitely, times are changing.
  
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The day cinema changed

coppola2.jpg

Precisely these days I've been reading Peter Biskind's wonderful book about the boom of independent cinema in the nineties: Down and Dirty Pictures: Miramax, Sundance, and the Rise of Independent Film.

It's like the second part of another essential: Easy Riders, Raging Bulls.

Two books which tell, in a fascinating way, two convulsed decades in the history of cinema.

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Today, 20 years after the beginning of the second decade and 40 after the first one, something has taken place which I'm sure would be the first chapter of a third book: the book which will tell how the Internet changed everything.


Today is the first day of the rest of the decade and we are here, not only as spectators but also as active participants. Risking our necks.


Las horas perdidas does an exceptional chronicle of what has happened. Don't miss it ;)


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Space photography: What are you waiting for taking the leap?

Silently, through the summer heat, the first of the material's announcement, called by the Embajada Lomográfica in Spain -LomoSpain-, has become a success: in  'Cosmonaut's dream', over 180 lomographic photographs peer into Cosmonaut's universe from as many points of view as authors there are: poetry, trompe l'oeil pictures, irony and humor... We have loved some of them because of their visual inventiveness and the way in which they transform every day spaces and objects. We have loved others because of the feelings which they recreate... Remember that we'll award the most cosmonautic ones. Tone isn't important, but the topic is! J



eugenia.png

Double exposures and mirror plays: Cosmonautics peers into an old theme park through Eugenia+'s interpretations.



camaritas.pngDo we still need to remind you why this lomography official announcement is so special?

You still have until the 25th of October to send your lomographies, to receive prizes and become our official lomographer!


A last-minute tip-off: There's an intrepid female lomographer who has written to us asking for the costumes 'for a couple of photos that you are going to love', promising that 'I will give it back just the way it is or  I'll go to Russia and find another one'. We though... well, Why not? So, if you have that picture in your mind and you need one of these costumes, in hola@elcosmonauta.es we're waiting for your audacity... and your promise of a fed acorn ham should you cause them any harm.

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Space photography: what are you waiting for to take the leap?

Quietly through summer heat, our first call for entries for materials
(made by Lomographic Embassy in Spain- LomoSpain) has been a success: in 'The Cosmonaut's dream', over 180 peek into The Cosmonaut's universe from as many angles as authors there are: poetry, tompe l'oeils, irony and humour... We have loved some of them because of their visual inventiveness and the way in which they transform everyday things and space. We have loved some other because of the feeling they recreate... Remember that we'll give the prizes to the most cosmonautic pictures. The atmosphere doesn't matter, but the topic does! :)

eugenia.pngDouble exposures and  reverse mirrors: Cosmonautics peeks into an old theme park from eugenia+ 's point of view.   

camaritas.png Do we still need to remind your why this call for lomographies is so special?

You still have until the 25th of Octuber to send us your lomographies, in order to receive prices and become our official lomographer!

 

A last minute tip-off: There's an intrepid female lomographer who has written to us asking for the costumes 'for a couple of pictures you are gonna love'. She has promised to 'send the costume back just as it is or I'll go to Russia and find another one', We thought... well, why not? So if you have that photograph in your mind and you need one of the costumes, we're waiting for your audacity at hola@elcosmonauta.es... and the promise of a corn-fed ham if you cause the costumes any damage. 


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A thousand phoenix rising (original post: Ted Hope)

A few days ago I found this article on Ted Hope's blog. Ted is an absolutely incredible person who has done a lot for independent cinema. A year ago, Ted posted this absolutely motivating entry, which could well serve as a manifesto for the community of film makers -like us- in the process of changing. I decided this was an amazing document which should become well-known, the more people the better. That's why I felt like translating it and asking him for permission to post it.

Here it is, for you.

A thousand phoenix rising

How The New Truly Free Filmmaking Community Will Rise From Indie's* Ashes

 


*Indie refers to independent cinema
mainly coming from USA,
from the nineties until today
and born with Sundance Festival.

 

I can't talk about the "crisis" of the indie film industry. There is no crisis. The country is in crisis. The economy is in crisis. We, the filmmakers, aren't in crisis.

The business is changing, but for us -us who are called Indie Filmmakers -- that's good that the business is changing. Filmmaking is an incredible privilege and we need to accept it as such - and accept the full responsibility that comes with that privilege.

The proclamations of Indie Film's demise are grossly exaggerated. How can there be a "Death Of Indie" when Indie -- real Indie, True Indie -- has yet to even live?

Yes, there's a profound paradigm shift, and that shift is the coming of true independence. The hope of this new independence is being threatened even before it has arrived. Are we going to fight for our independence and can we even shoulder the responsibility that independence requires? That is: will we ban together and work for our communal needs? Are we ready to leave dreams of stardom and wealth behind us?

When someone says, "Indie is dead", they are talking about the state of the Indie Film Business, as opposed to what are actually the films themselves. They can say "The sky is falling" because for the last fifteen years, the existing power base in the film industry has focused on films fit for the existing business model, as opposed to ever truly concentrating on creating a business model for the films that filmmakers want to make.

This is where we are right now: on the verge of a TRULY FREE FILM CULTURE, one that is driven by both the creators and the audiences, pulled down by the audience and not pushed onto them by those that control the apparatus and the supply. We now have the power and this remarkable tool for something different, but will we fight to preserve the Internet, the tool that offers us our new freedom? Can we banish the dream of golden distribution deals, and move away from asking others to distribute and market it for us? Can we accept that being a filmmaker means taking responsibility for your films, the primary responsibility, all the way through the process? That is independence and that is freedom.

Indie, True Indie, is in its infancy. The popular term "Indie" is a distortion, growing out of our communal laziness and complacency - our willingness to be marketed blandly and not specifically. Our culture is vast and diverse, and we need to celebrate these differences, not diminish them. It's time to put that term "Indie" to rest.


Independence is within our reach, but we but we have to do what we have never done before: we have to choose.

It's a lot like the Presidential election. And it's also a lot like psychotherapy: we have to ask ourselves if the pain we are experiencing presently is enough to motivate us to overcome the fear inherent in change itself.

We have to change our behavior and make that choice. We have to choose the type of culture we want. We have to choose the type of films we want available to us. We have to choose whether the Internet is the corporations or ours. We have to choose whether we decide for ourselves whether a film is worthwhile or whether we let those same corporations decide. We have to choose who are audiences are and how we are to reach them. We have to choose how we can all best contribute to this new system. And as we act on those choices, we have to get others to make a choice too.


For the last fifteen years our Community has made huge strides at demystifying the production process and providing access to the financing and distribution gatekeepers. Some call this democratization, but it is not. This demystification of production was a great first step, but it is not give the filmmaker real power; generally speaking we are still there with our hat in our hands. In some ways, understanding the great behemoth that is production is also a distraction. It has distracted us from making really good films. And as it has distracted us from gaining the knowledge and seizing the power that is available to us. We have learned how to make films and how to bring them to market. We now have to demystify how to market and distribute films, and to do it in a way truly suited to the films we are making and desire to make.

Don't get me wrong the last fifteen years have been great. The Indie Period - as I suspect history will call it --- has brought us a far more diverse array of films than we had previously. It got better; we got more choices - but that is still not freedom. We are still in a damn similar place to the way it was back when cinema was invented 100 years ago. And it's time we moved to a new term, to the period of a Truly Free Film Culture.


If we want the freedom to tell the stories we want to tell, we all have to start to contribute to build the infrastructure that can support them. We need to step back from the glamour of making all these films, and instead help each other build the links, articulate the message, make the commitments, that will turn us truly into a Truly Free Film community. We have to stop making so many films.

The work before us is a major readjustment that will require many sacrifices. We must redesign the business structure for what the films actually are. We have to recognize that a Truly Free Film Culture is quite different from Studio Films and even different from the prestige film that the specialized distributors make. But look at what we gain: we will stop self-censoring our work to fit a business model that was appropriated from Hollywood and their mass market films to begin with. We will reach out to the audiences that are hungry for something new, for something truthful, for something about the world they experience, for something that is as complex as the emotions they feel. We can let them guide us because for the first time we can have real access and contact with them.

Presently, we are divided and conquered by a system that preys upon our dreams of success, encouraging us to squander collective progress on false hopes of personal enrichment. We follow the herd and only lead reluctantly. If we want Truly Free Films we have to stop dreaming of wealth, and take the job of building the community and support system.

For the last decade and a half, we have been myopically focused on production. Using Sundance submissions as a barometer, our production ability has increased eight and half times over -- 850% -- from 400 to 3600 films in fifteen years.

C'mon! What are we doing? Wasting a tremendous amount of energy, talent, and brainpower - that much is clear. If the average budget of Sundance submissions is $500K, that means the aggregate production costs are $1.8 billion dollars a year. That's a hell of a lot of money to lose annually. And you can bet the Indie World isn't going to get a government bail out like Wall Street and the Banking Industry have.

We need to recognize the responsibility of telling unique stories in unique ways. We are frequently innovators and groundbreakers, but that brings additional responsibilities. Working at the intersection of art and commerce requires consideration for those that come after us. It is our responsibility to do all within our power to deliver a positive financial return. If we lose money, it is a lot harder for those that follow us. With a debt of $1.8 billion per annum you can bet it will be a lot harder for a lot of people. And it should be - but it didn't need to be.

We don't get better films or build audiences by picking up cameras. Despite this huge boom in production, the number of truly talented uniquely voiced auteurs produced annually remains unchanged. What's happened instead is the infrastructure has rusted, the industry has failed to innovate, and we are standing on a precipice begging the giant to banish us into oblivion. Rebuilding that infrastructure, bringing good work to hungry audiences is a far greater glory than another celluloid trophy for only you to stare at.

There is a silver lining too in this dark cloud of over production that they like to call The Glut. As a young man I never found peace until I moved to New York City; the calm I found in New York, is explained by a line of Woody Allen's: "in New York, you always know what you are missing". What's great about a surplus of options - and we have that now, and not just from movies, but also from the web, from books, from games - what's great is that you have to make a choice. You have to commit. And you have to commit in advance.

The business model of the current entertainment industry is predicated on consumers not making choices but acting on impulses. Choice comes from research, from knowledge, and from tastes. Speak to someone from Netflix, and they will tell you that the longer someone is a member, the more their tastes move to auteurs, to quality film. Once we all wake up and realize that with films, as frankly with everything, we have to be thoughtful, and tastes will change. We have to make it a choice, a choice for, and not an impulse.

We are now in a cultural war and not just the red state/blue state, participate vs. obey kind, not just the kind of cultural war that politicians seem to want to break this country down to. We are in a culture war in terms of what we get to see, enjoy and make. The Lovers Of Cinema have been losing this war because the Makers have invested in a dream of Prince Charming, content to have him sweep down, pick us up, and sing that rags to riches refrain even if it comes but once a year to one lucky filmmaker out of 3,600.

So what is this TRULY FREE FILM CULTURE I am proposing? It is one that utilizes first and foremost the remarkable tool that is The Internet. It is the internet that transforms the culture business from a business that is based around limited supply and the rule of gatekeepers to a business that around the fulfillment of all audience desire, and not just the desire of mass audiences, but also of the niches.

We have never had this sort opportunity before and the great tragedy is that just as we are learning what it means, forces are vying to take it away from us. The principal that all information, all creators, all audiences should be treated equally within the structure that is the Internet is popularly referred to as Net Neutrality. The Telecos, the Cable Companies, and their great ally, the Hollywood Motion Picture Studios and their MPAA are now trying to end that equality. And with it you will lose the opportunity to be TRULY FREE FILMMAKERS. But they are not going to succeed because we are going to ban together and organize; we are going to save the Internet, and keep equal access for all. Right?

A TRULY FREE FILM CULTURE will respect the audience's needs and desires as much as Indie currently respects the filmmakers. A TRULY FREE FILM CULTURE recognizes film as a dialogue and recognizes that a dialogue requires a community. Participants in a TRULY FREE FILM CULTURE work to participate in that community, work to get others to participate in that community. We work to get others to make a choice, to make a choice about what they want to do, what they want to see. We all become curators. We all promote the films we love. We reach out and mobilize others to vote with their feet, vote with their eyes, and vote with their dollars, to not act on impulses, but on knowledge and experience.

A TRULY FREE FILMMAKER -- be they producer or director -- recognizes their responsibility is not just to find a good script, not just to find a good cast, a good package. A TRULY FREE FILMMAKER recognizes that they must do more than find the funding, and even more than justifying that funding. The TRULY FREE FILMMAKER now recognizes their responsibility is to also find the audience, grow the audience, expand the audience, and then also to move the audience, not just emotionally, but also literally: to move them onwards further to other things. Whether it is by direct contact, email blasts, or blogging, whatever it is, express what you want our culture to be. And express it to all you know.

The TRULY FREE FILMMAKER also recognizes that knowledge is a true power, and that ownership is a false power. The TRULY FREE FILMMAKER recognizes that others, as many others as possible, sharing in that knowledge will make everything better: the films, the apparatus, the business, and the just plain pleasure of participating. We are walking into new territory and we best map it out together.

The TRULY FREE FILMMAKER is no longer bound to just the 5 or 6 reel length to tell their stories. The TRULY FREE FILMMAKER is no longer bound to projection as the primary audience platform and is not stuck on the one film one theater one-week type of release.

It is this thing that we once called the Independent Community that is the sector that truly innovates. The lower cost of our creations allows for greater risks. It is what we used to call "Indies" that has innovated on a technical level, on a content level, on a story telling approach, and it is this, the TRULY FREE FILM CULTURE that will innovate still further in the future of distribution.

With the passion that produces 3600 films a year, with just a portion of those resources, we can build a new infrastructure that opens up new audiences, new models, and new revenue streams that can build a true alternative to the mainstream culture that has been force fed us for years. We are on the verge of truly opening up what can be told, how it is told, to whom it is told, and where is told. We can seize it, but it requires that we embrace the full responsibility of what independence means.

Independence requires knowing your film inside and out. Knowing not just what you are choosing to do, but what you have chosen not to do. Independence comes with knowing that you have fully considered all your options. It is knowing your audience, knowing how to reach them - and not abstractly, but concretely.

I can assure you too, that this work of slowing down on our projects, learning their possibilities fully, finding their audiences, owning our audiences, not only will make our films better, but it will also get them made; for it will create that evasive air of inevitability around your projects that gets films financed. It will also lead you into the real challenge of reaching that audience and earning directly the reward of true interaction with them.

Let's make the next ten years about seizing our independence, killing "indie" film, and bringing forth a Truly Free Film Culture.

 

(Original article in English, posted in http://letsmakebetterfilms.blogspot.com on 28/09/08)



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Better than free: Brian Newman

An absolutely brilliant lecture by Brian Newman, ex CEO of the Tribeca Film Festival, at this year's DIY Days.

 "If digital copies have no cost, you will have to sell something which cannot be copied."



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BOOK SEEKS (USED TO) SPONSOR

            (or how to sponsor magnetised paradises in the pure entrails of Space)


poetica1.jpg

If you have pried through the Cosmonaut's website you'll know many things about this Riot Cinema Collective project. For instance, that among the articles that you can acquire (and becoming a producer in this way), there's a book: Poetics for Cosmonauts, by Henry Pierrot. And you know that the film's script owes a lot to this book, almost as much as to the strange chance which led us to find it.


Since the first edition of this little gem is completely sold out, we thought it was time to reprint it. We decided to do it this time in an English-Spanish bilingual edition, with a prologue by Alberto Olmos and an epilogue written by an important person in the cinema world.
And you know how the film project works: anybody can become a producer.


Now there's a new way of doing it, and it's by funding the reprint of Poetics for Cosmonauts. A 500 copies print run will be made, and for that we need a sponsor.


This edition has an approximate price of €1,200.


With your contribution you will receive a percentage of the film but you will also be mentioned as the person who made the reprint possible and your name will be in the book. Besides, you can choose to change your corresponding percentage of the film for a percentage of the possible benefits the selling of books may create. You choose... 


 

EDITED: We have just broken a Crowdfunding record, for sure :P


Two hours after posting this entry, Poetics for Cosmonauts has found a sponsor: Javier Pinto


 

We've started to work like crazy to have the reprint for October.





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Did You Know?: Social Media Edition





From Socialnomics, where you can check the sources for statistics (Via Wearesocial)


REMEMBER | Did You Know Cinema Edition


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Going Viral

This article by Tucker Aaron about how to make a viral video is a MUST READ.

Enjoy :)

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ICAA and the Spanish Cinema Grants

ICAA and the Spanish Cinema Grants

This isn't a post of regret. Nobody should expect us to shed a single tear, neither a complaint or even a dissatisfaction face.

 

Just as we expected, we haven't been given the Culture Office Grant (in spite of people's claims ).

 

Our store was 2 out of 10, which means that the distinguished members of the board have valued with a bit more above 0 our funding plan, our artistic dossier, the film script, our shooting plan, our cast, our crew and the 900 people who are already behind this project.

We are still curious about knowing whether our project was so disastrous, so coarse, so unoriginal and so badly set out as to deserve 2 points or there's some kind of political interest behind it.

 

It is true that O Apostolo has been given the 100% of the points, which we are tremendously happy for, since at least this proves that a project which is partly funded by crowdfunding can also have a place in these grants.

 

 

Now all that's left is wondering what will the guys from O Apostolo with their half million euros. Will they give up crowdfunding? How will they manage to distribute the film among so many people with the restrictions implied by a State grant? We are waiting impatiently to see if they decide to give a coup de main.

 

On our behalf, once the grants have been made public, we want to tell what we planned to do if they would give it to us:

1) Sharing the theories of Carlos Sánchez-Almeida; if according to the Spanish legislation a film "producer" is that person who gives capital, in the case of a film it should be the Spanish citizens. It is because of this that we were going to license our film under public domain.

 

2) In a measure which could have been branded as certainly populist, we had planned to devote a 10% of the grant to the production of DVDs of the film, once finished, for its free delivery in the whole country.

 

Since nothing of this has happened, we have nothing else to do but to chin up a little, thinking that it might not be that our project is so so bad, but that it's a bit too soon for certain people or certain organizations to understand it as something viable and that in a little time, thousands of people who may support it would prove them wrong. That Cosmonaut is the craziest and riskiest initiative to be brewed in this country for a long time and that it's made with so much care that it deserves an opportunity (specifically, the €150,000 opportunity which we demanded from ICAA, a 1% of the total budget which had been given out in grants for new film makers or experimental films).

 

 

Congratulations to the winners. Let's hope we can see great films next year (if possible, for free).

 

Nicolás Alcalá and Cosmonaut's team.

 

PS: There's something which we consider unforgivable and bad behaviour on behalf of this Office. And this is that, one more year, a grant's been denied to Cesar Velasco Broca, one of our country's bravest directors, acknowledged all around the world but here; who has submitted his full-length film project under three different forms already and in any possible way. This year he was only asking for €200,000. It's absolutely ridiculous that they're still determined not to see.



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"I want a million euros for The Cosmonaut"


free-me.jpg

We recently had the honor to meet Carlos Sánchez-Almeida.


Carlos Sánchez-Almeida is, according to google, a lawyer specialized in computer crime and security in new technologies.

 

To us, he is the most free and liveliest spirits that has flown over this decade. He is the best speaker and theoretical writer we've ever read on the net, and a brilliant mind in the blind period of these dark years.


We have enjoyed each of his writings published on the internet, those which he signs, and those he doesn't, his theories, his tantrums, and his wise motives. And we can proudly say he has been a pillar on which to build our theories about a free cinema, and about this new model we're trying to create.


We had the honor to meet him. To have him read our project. To receive his warm words of enthusiasm.

 

And now we can proudly say that he supports The Cosmonaut 100%, and we'll be able to count with his legal help in case we have problems with certain institutions, and specifically with a little idea that has been going round our heads and will be announced at the right time. But, not happy enough with all this, he has also written an open letter to the Minister for Cultural Affairs, Ms. Ángeles Gonzalez-Sinde, with which we've cried from laughter.


There are not enough blogs to thank you Carlos.

Enjoy:

 

Pestering digression: open letter to the Ministry of Cultural Affairs.

 

From: Carlos Sánchez-Almeida, [csalmeida@xxxxxxxxxxxx.com]

 

To: Ángeles González-Sinde Reig, [ministra@mcu.es]

 

Cc: Ignasi Guardans Cambó, [icaa@mcu.es], Expert Commission on Film Production Public Support [losquerepartenlapasta@mcu.es]

 

Subject: I want a million euros for The Cosmonaut

 

Dear Minister, Head of the Institute of Cinematography and Audiovisual Arts, Expert Commission:

 

Under the Article 29 of the Constitution and the Organic Law 4/2001, regulatory frame for the petition right, I address you this letter in order for you to give us some dough.

 

In short, as for the long part of the matter you already have enough advisors: I want a million euros for thecosmonaut.org

 

As I'm aware that you like the legal-festive literature, I will start by the pleas in law. The Expert Commission in charge of giving the dough was founded according to the Cultural Affair's Ministerial Order 4028/2007, of December 28th (how naïve...).

By the December 11th, 2008 Resolution, from the Institute of Cinematography and Audiovisual Arts, an official announcement was made for project subsidies on feature film productions where there is new directors, on the production of experimental work of determined artistic and cultural content and on the production of documentaries and animation series, under Article 11 of the Royal Decree 526/2002 of June 14th. For these funding initiatives an amount of 10.000.000 euros was held in reserve, chargeable to the available credit in the budgetary account 24.101.470, Cinematography Shelter Fund, of the 335C program, Cinematography, of the expense budget of the Institution for the year 2009. These subsidies where enhanced by 5.000.000 euros by the May 13th, 2009 Resolution (Lord Have Mercy...)

 

So, you have 15 million euros to finance, amongst others, "experimental projects, or those of determined artistic and cultural content, considered "not easy to finance". You know what? That's exactly what thecosmonaut.org was looking for.

 

Let's look at the grounds of the matter. "There is a reason", and a big one: The Cosmonaut is a Spanish project for a science-fiction film produced by many, in an open and participative way, with a Creative Commons license so that anyone can edit, name, remix and copy as they please. That is, all investments in the film will be to the advantage of the community.

 

Whether the script is good or not, we'll let the Minister decide, as she is a connoisseur. Here is the synopsis:

 

 "What if you got back home... and there was nobody there? In 1975, the first Russian cosmonaut on the Moon is unable to make his way     back and is declared missing in Space. However, through ghostly radio messages, he claims to have come back to Earth and found it empty, not a living soul. His unrealistic presence and his voice will little by little destroy the world of his beloved ones."

 

For a moment there I thought I was the cosmonaut, sending ghostly messages to an empty Ministry of Cultural Affairs, not a soul in it.

Please, prove me wrong. Prove that you are alive. Prove that you still believe in the miracle of cinema. The miracle of a cinema with no copyright.

 

One million euros, Mr. Guardans, to prove that you still believe in fundamental rights, to convince us that the scene you made for not taking your shoes off at Barcelona airport was caused by your faith in freedom, and not by the holes on your socks.

 

I assure you it will be the best investment you will make in your lives.

 

Yours faithfully,

 

Carlos Sánchez-Almeida

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Free music

For you to use wherever you want.

"Not only free music, but good music" this initiative is offering quality music under free use.

Make sure you check out the license, becuase the music might be restricted for certain uses.


Download

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The Future of the Arts

Playing with Marx's cyclical economic models theory, present brings us very interesting things which are worth taking a look at since they'll probably become the new distribution paradigms of the future.


In Internet and the new technologies era, Walter Benjamin's theories make more sense than ever: digital copies have no cost at all.

Users are aware of this and, increasingly, are less willing to pay high prices for something which leaves wide benefit margins to producers and distributors.

The model is changing and distribution and production companies are exploiting the before mentioned model, nevertheless, with their sight on what is next.

The living example of this, applied to one of the main world industries is called SPOTIFY.
If you haven't heard of it, this might be due to two reasons: you've either been locked inside an antiaircraft shelter for the last two months or, more probably, you've been locked inside an antiaircraft shelter for the last two months.


Do you remember when you used to copy tapes from your friends? And later, when cd's arrived and you used to buy one once in a blue moon? Well, remember when somebody told you: Don't you know about Napster? You'll see...
And logically, the world - in one way or another - changed.

Well, Spotify is something like that.
Imagine a program that uses the minimum resources, with a hyper intuitive interface, similar to that of your favorite music program (call it iTunes or any other), with its instant search system and a nearly unapproachable music catalogue that grows every day.

And what's the difference with iTunes, then?

Its online.
And it's free.

Ok. You can close your mouth now. And stop being suspicious. No, it doesn't take long to upload. It's fast like the devil. No, the little advertisement which it has right now isn't annoying or intrusive. And no, they won't fill it up in the future. What you see is what you get. And if you don't want any ads, you can have a premium account for 10€ per month.

You think there isn't a lot of music?
Do these ring a bell? Spotify's catalogue has over 12 million songs and thousands more are added every day.

And this is the focus of our thoughts: Emi, Warner, Universal and Sony offer their whole musical catalogue online and free? What's going on?

Exactly: change is just around the corner and, just as we said, even though distribution companies are trying to exploit the goose that lays the golden eggs until there's nothing left, in the meantime, they play with their left hand to approach the future.
A really close future where digital copies have no cost. Where ideas aren't paid for, they're free.
Where the model is supported by the product's additional value and where intermediaries between artist and user are removed, allowing a more personal relationship and facilitating cost reduction.
Want more proof this isn't just a bluff that will outdate?
U2, the most well known group in the world after The Beatles, will release their new album on Spotify, where it would be available to listen to exclusively for a week, before it's commercialized in shops and other places.
Revolution has begun and it's coming through in big leaps. The smartest people have already started to realize and apply new business models with surprising results and ideas, lot's of them, brilliant.
Examples?

Radiohead uploaded their latest album on Internet, for free. Donations accepted... And they collected more money than they ever did with their three previous albums... altogether.

Josh Freese, Nine Inch Nails drummer, sells his solo album with a range of "additional features". For example, if you buy the 50$ pack, he gives you a t-shirt, the CD and calls you to say thank you. How thoughtful.


The funny thing is that as the amount increases, things get a little bit crazy. Foot massage... Being your slave for a day... Getting drunk with you or even going for a ride in his car... And keeping it afterwards.


Imagination has no limits in the new possibilities that both Internet and global communications offer.


New models exist. They're profitable. There are alternatives. You just have to be willing to look for them.

The end of the world has been announced since a long time ago, but we prefer to be on this other side of Humankind. The one which believes we're experiencing a privileged and wonderful time where the world is finally in our hands. You just have to take the risk.

Move or Expire.


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Rip, Mix, Share

...faltaban dos días para el despegue, hacía mucho frío y había estado nevando intermitentemente. Ella esperaba fuera del complejo espacial a que acabase la interminable reunión de emergencia. Bajo la luz azul que iluminaba uno de los edificios, la nieve resaltaba aún más blanca y a pesar de tener el cuerpo entumecido por la humedad, estaba disfrutando de ese momento, del aire gélido que forzaba su respiración, del crujir de la nieve bajo sus pies...
Entonces apareció Stan como por arte de magia, envuelto entre el humo de unos de sus cigarrillos y se quedó junto a ella contemplando la media luna y la oscuridad de la noche. No hablaron de nada, solo permanecieron así, en silencio, suspendidos en el tiempo...


Incluso con el paso de los días, cuando ella imaginaba que quizás lo había soñado, volvía latente el recuerdo de sus brazos rozándose, solo ligeramente por encima de los abrigos, el antojo de ser la piel contra la piel... y la ausencia, la ausencia brusca, el hueco impreso allí en la pared y en su brazo que ardía, amputado, privado del contacto, cuando él se retiró bruscamente... y ella... ella respondiendo como una autómata a los chicos, a Andrei, que salían charlando animadamente, mientras todo su deseo la empujaba a permanecer apoyada en ese muro para siempre... Y después Andrei, con su sonrisa encantadora, de pirata, mirándola despreocupadamente, sin verla una vez más, las palmadas en la espalda, las bromas, el lenguaje ancestral de un grupo de hombres que fantaseaban con tocar la Luna y Stan... que ya no pertenecía a ninguna parte, observando como siempre, pareciendo sentir un afecto transitorio por la escena, una ternura dirigida hacia los que estaban allí reunidos, como si se tratara de algo que se pudiese tocar...

Fue entonces, en el momento en que Andrei abrazó a Stan del cuello con un impulso infantil y ambos se alejaron unos pasos, cuando Julia fue consciente de cuánto les odiaba y les amaba al mismo tiempo, inevitablemente, sin poder discernir dónde empezaba uno y terminaba el otro, o si acaso eran la misma persona... tembló incontroladamente y con toda la dignidad que pudo reunir se limitó a caminar detrás de ellos.


Rosa de la Campa (primera pieza de obra derivada Creative Commons)

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The Strength of the Wolf is the Pack

Un ejemplo de financiación DIWO o Crowdfunding: www.bandstocks.com

Se trata de una página donde artistas de todo el mundo pueden colgar su proyecto de nuevo álbum. La idea es que todos los internautas voten los diferentes proyectos. Quien consiga más votos, pasa a la segunda parte del proceso: la recogida de donaciones. Cualquier persona, una vez que el proyecto está en este punto, puede realizar una aportación de dinero para que el artista autofinancie su proyecto.

Hay artistas desconocidos, pero también está Patrick Wolf, cantautor inglés de una ganada reputación. Aunque podría contar con cualquier discográfica que pagara su nuevo disco, Battle, ha decidido entrar a formar parte de esta iniciativa porque le permitirá grabar su disco sin presiones, con total control artístico. Además, si lo logra, los derechos de dichas canciones serán para él.



Las ventajas que tiene ayudar a todos estos artistas a que graben su disco es que cualquiera se convierte en parte del proyecto, en calidad de accionista. Los artistas y los inversores se embarcan juntos en el proyecto artístico de la grabación. Además, todos los ingresos netos generados por las ventas del disco (tanto de descargas digitales como de CDs) se repartirán entre ellos. En el caso de Patrick Wolf, este reparto será del 50% para el cantautor, el 20% para la empresa Bandstocks y el 30% restante entre todos los accionistas. Además, los accionistas tendrán otras ventajas como la obtención del CD una vez listo, su nombre en los "títulos de crédito" del disco o pases para acudir a eventos especiales de Patrick Wolf, entre otros.

Este es otro ejemplo más de cómo se están acortando los intermediarios entre los artistas y el gran público y de cómo cada vez hay más personas que están a favor de compartir sus obras de forma libre y pública.

Pero pensemos un momento en algo que hay de fondo en toda esta iniciativa: que artistas y grupos de peso recurran a este modo de financiación, ¿es realmente bueno? Siguiendo con Patrick Wolf, él ha optado por esta iniciativa para hacer su nuevo disco con total libertad, no porque no tenga dinero o productores que lo financiaran. Por tanto, si todos los grupos de peso hicieran lo mismo, probablemente se acabaría financiando siempre a los mismos artistas, acotando aún más las posibilidades de los nuevos para salir adelante.

Una de las mayores ventajas de proyectos como el de Bandstocks es que nuevos artistas pueden hacer realidad su sueño de sacar disco, pero si hay famosos que hacen lo mismo, lógicamente obtendrán más apoyo los grupos consagrados que los nuevos puesto que tendrán miles de personas que quieran seguir escuchando su música, por lo que realizan las donaciones. El coste de oportunidad de esta situación sería no dar la oportunidad a nuevos artistas que, quizá en un futuro, serían nuestro grupo preferido.

El debate está servido

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