IndieWire talks to Burns about the low budget film, and how he came to invite fans to submit work for it. Edward Burns will listen to and select the winning track by end of day on Friday, April 22. Submissions open on April 12, and will close on April 20 at 9:00 am PST / 12:00 pm EST. TheAtlantic: How Hollywood Butchered Its Best Movie PostersĮdward Burns Invites Fans Music For His Next Movieįor his latest indie movie, Edward Burns first invited fans to submit movie poster designs (to be used at the Tribeca Film Festival) and that went so well that he's now looking for music:Įdward Burns' upcoming film Newlyweds is looking for a song for placement in the film. I came across the above after seeing Steven Heller's article at The Atlantic which highlights the fact that studios aren't using Bass movie poster designs for their DVD releases. The Movie title stills collection: Saul Bass Christian Annyas has a website where he has assembled still sequences showing many of these sequences. Saul Bass designed some of the most iconic movie titles sequences. LATimes: Sony and MGM finalize James Bond, co-financing partnership I wouldn't have had enough exposure or the range or shadows with film." Hollywood Reporter: Cinematographer Roger Deakins Switching From Film to Digital Camera It wasn't a big-budget film, so we were using existing streetlights and boosting with a practical light. We were doing a lot of night shooting in downtown L.A. "I did a test on Alexa, and it looked right for the movie. There are some holdouts though, and the article reports that The Dark Knight Rises will be shot on film because director Christopher Nolan prefers "to shoot on film." Roger Deakins Continues His Move To DigitalĬinematographer Roger Deakins has been talking about going to digital for the past year, so it's not really news to see that Roger just finished Now using the Arri Alexa, and that "I'm probably going to use Alexa on my next shoot - it seems very likely." What is interesting is that it appears that movie is the next James Bond movie. Electronic Frontier Foundation: YouTube Sends Users To Copyright School: Will Content Owners Have to Go, Too? As we have been reminded all too often, many content owners are badly in need of copyright education. The Electronic Frontier Foundation applauds these changes, though they think they could do still more:Īs an initial matter, if YouTube is going to ask users to learn more about copyright when they get a takedown notice, they should require the same of rightsholders whose takedowns are disputed. YouTube has now changed the policy, and re-vamped their "Copyright Education Center." They also now require users who receive takedown notices to go to "copyright school." It used to be that if you had three "strikes" against your YouTube account for uploading copyrighted material, then they would remove the account permanently. YouTube Changes It's Copyright Violation Policy
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