The annual exhibition conference is taking place at Glasgow Film Theatre.
The full programme and line-up of speakers for this year’s This Way Up film exhibition conference (November 29-30), held at the Glasgow Film Theatre, has been unveiled.
This year’s keynote speakers are Bobby Allen, VP business development at Mubi, Swedish broadcaster and media analyst Johanna Koljonen, and Dawn Walton, founder of black-led theatre company Eclipse Theatre Company.
Oscar-winning film-maker Roger Ross Williams, winner at this year’s Sundance with Life, Animated, will be in conversation with BBC Radio Scotland presenter Janice Forsyth.
Other speakers at this year’s event include the BFI’s head of audiences Ben Luxford, The Levelling writer-director Hope Dickson Leach, Dogwoof’s head of distribution Oli Harbottle, British Council film programmer Jemma Desai, National Media Museum film manager Kathryn Penny, Regional Screen Scotland CEO Robert Livingston and BFI London Film Festival film programmer Kate Taylor.
This year’s...
The full programme and line-up of speakers for this year’s This Way Up film exhibition conference (November 29-30), held at the Glasgow Film Theatre, has been unveiled.
This year’s keynote speakers are Bobby Allen, VP business development at Mubi, Swedish broadcaster and media analyst Johanna Koljonen, and Dawn Walton, founder of black-led theatre company Eclipse Theatre Company.
Oscar-winning film-maker Roger Ross Williams, winner at this year’s Sundance with Life, Animated, will be in conversation with BBC Radio Scotland presenter Janice Forsyth.
Other speakers at this year’s event include the BFI’s head of audiences Ben Luxford, The Levelling writer-director Hope Dickson Leach, Dogwoof’s head of distribution Oli Harbottle, British Council film programmer Jemma Desai, National Media Museum film manager Kathryn Penny, Regional Screen Scotland CEO Robert Livingston and BFI London Film Festival film programmer Kate Taylor.
This year’s...
- 10/27/2016
- by tom.grater@screendaily.com (Tom Grater)
- ScreenDaily
The annual exhibition conference is taking place at Glasgow Film Theatre.
This year’s This Way Up film exhibition conference (Nov 29-30), held at the Glasgow Film Theatre, will spotlight the following topics:
The Problem of Abundance: exploring the continued increase of film content in UK cinemas – there were 759 films distributed in 2015, up from 527 in 2008 – and what this means for exhibitors.
The Future of Storytelling: highlighting the new technologies of Virtual and Augmented Reality, which have played major parts at international film festivals this year, and how these can sit within traditional exhibition models.
The Power of Place: focusing on how exhibition spaces affect audiences, and what exhibitors’ roles are within communities.
Hacking the Back Office: looking at digital tools utilised by cinemas to manage time, resources and showing films.
This year’s keynote speakers will include Bobby Allen, VP business development at Mubi, Swedish broadcaster and media analyst Johanna Koljonen, and [link=nm...
This year’s This Way Up film exhibition conference (Nov 29-30), held at the Glasgow Film Theatre, will spotlight the following topics:
The Problem of Abundance: exploring the continued increase of film content in UK cinemas – there were 759 films distributed in 2015, up from 527 in 2008 – and what this means for exhibitors.
The Future of Storytelling: highlighting the new technologies of Virtual and Augmented Reality, which have played major parts at international film festivals this year, and how these can sit within traditional exhibition models.
The Power of Place: focusing on how exhibition spaces affect audiences, and what exhibitors’ roles are within communities.
Hacking the Back Office: looking at digital tools utilised by cinemas to manage time, resources and showing films.
This year’s keynote speakers will include Bobby Allen, VP business development at Mubi, Swedish broadcaster and media analyst Johanna Koljonen, and [link=nm...
- 9/15/2016
- by tom.grater@screendaily.com (Tom Grater)
- ScreenDaily
A new series of short online dramas take inspiration from the novel A Rage in Harlem. Laura Barnett meets the writers – including hip-hop star Akala and playwright Bola Agbaje – bringing black Britain to life
A man paces up and down his prison cell, recalling the act of revenge that put him there. In a Middlesbrough shopping centre, two brothers fence goods to buy medicine for their ailing mother.
These are some of the stories told by 10by10, a remarkable new project combining theatre and film. Commissioned and directed by Dawn Walton, whose Sheffield-based Eclipse Theatre is one of the UK's foremost black-led theatre companies, the project consists of 10 short films written by and starring some of Britain's brightest young playwrights and actors.
The stolen stuff being sold in Middlesbrough is perfume, which gives its name to the film by Ishy Din; Din grew up there and worked as a taxi...
A man paces up and down his prison cell, recalling the act of revenge that put him there. In a Middlesbrough shopping centre, two brothers fence goods to buy medicine for their ailing mother.
These are some of the stories told by 10by10, a remarkable new project combining theatre and film. Commissioned and directed by Dawn Walton, whose Sheffield-based Eclipse Theatre is one of the UK's foremost black-led theatre companies, the project consists of 10 short films written by and starring some of Britain's brightest young playwrights and actors.
The stolen stuff being sold in Middlesbrough is perfume, which gives its name to the film by Ishy Din; Din grew up there and worked as a taxi...
- 8/29/2012
- by Laura Barnett
- The Guardian - Film News
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