Celebrating Thirtieth Anniversary, IFP Re-Launches 'IFP Market' as 'Independent Film Week'
Celebrating Thirtieth Anniversary, IFP Re-Launches 'IFP Market' as 'Independent Film Week'
For First Time, Event Will Take Place at New York's Fashion Institute of Technology from September 14 - 19, 2008
NEW YORK, April 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Gearing up for its 30th anniversary this September, IFP today announced that its annual IFP Market has been officially renamed Independent Film Week to reflect its mission of discovering, showcasing, and supporting new independent film projects and talent.
IFP is the nation's oldest and largest organization of independent filmmakers. Since its founding in 1979, IFP has facilitated the development, financing or distribution of 7,000 independent films, while more than 20,000 filmmakers have participated in its programs. The organization has fostered early work by leading filmmakers including Charles Burnett, Edward Burns, Martha Coolidge, Todd Haynes, Barbara Kopple, Michael Moore, John Sayles, Jim Jarmusch and Kevin Smith. More recently, IFP provided support for this year's Oscar-winning documentary short Freeheld, and the Sundance Grand Jury Prize-winning Frozen River (Sony Pictures Classics, Aug. 2008).
Along with the name change, IFP also announced that Independent Film Week will move from Soho's Angelika Film Center and Puck Building to Chelsea's Fashion Institute of Technology (F.I.T.) and nearby venues. The move will better enable IFP to expand its activities.
According to Michelle Byrd, Executive Director of IFP, this year's new developments mark the culmination of a number of changes made to the event over the past several years, including the elimination of completed features six years ago.
"In the film industry, the word 'Market' suggests business transactions, but IFP's commitment to filmmakers and their projects extends long beyond the six days of Independent Film Week," said Michelle Byrd, Executive Director of IFP. "Our goal is to provide a launching pad for career-spanning relationships, and we wanted our new name to encompass that broader mission."
As in the past, the centerpiece of Independent Film Week will be the "Project Forum," a showcase for 150 new works in development, of which half are documentaries. The Forum is divided into three sections: Emerging Narrative, for writers and writer/directors seeking producers; No Borders International Co-Production Market, for experienced producers seeking financing partners; and Spotlight on Documentaries, for projects in production and post-production that are currently seeking financing partners and festival invitations.
In 2007, more than 1,000 industry professionals attended the six-day event, and IFP arranged more than 2,000 one-on-one pitch meetings between filmmakers and executives from production companies, distributors, exhibitors, broadcasters, and film festivals.
To attract the most-promising works-in-progress and encourage longer-term relationships with their creators, IFP is also eliminating fees for filmmakers accepted into the Project Forum.
Other highlights of Independent Film Week include the Independent Filmmakers Conference, a Showcase Screening from IFP's Independent Filmmaker Labs, and the Independent Filmmaker Awards Ceremony, in which more than $100,000 is awarded to filmmakers, including The Kodak Grand Jury Screenwriting Award, eight Panasonic Digital Filmmaker Grants, the Adrienne Shelly Director's Grant, and The Fledgling Fund Awards for a Socially Conscious Documentary and an Emerging Latino Filmmaker.
The submission deadlines for Independent Film Week begin May 2, 2008. For guidelines and submission forms, visit www.ifp.org.
Kodak is the Premier Sponsor of Independent Film Week. Gold sponsors include Panasonic and SAGIndie. Philanthropic Support Provided by The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, Artists Public Domain, The Fledgling Fund, and the Winston Foundation.
About IFP
IFP is the nation's oldest organization of independent filmmakers, founded in New York City in September 1979. It began as a sidebar to the New York Film Festival, and grew into a nonprofit membership and advocacy group. IFP's events and programs have enabled filmmakers to share information, build relationships, secure funding and find audiences outside the Hollywood studio system. Since IFP's inception, 20,000 filmmakers have participated in its programs. IFP has facilitated the development, financing or distribution of 7,000 independent films.
About Independent Film Week
Formerly known as the IFP Market, Independent Film Week is the oldest and largest forum in the US for the discovery of new projects in development and new voices on the independent film scene. Deadlines for Project Submissions begin May 2. For information www.ifp.org.
IFP works with a number of partners on Independent Film Week. For No Borders, the only co-production market in the US for narrative projects, partners include established funding bodies (Telefilm Canada, UK Film Council, Germany's Filmstiftung NRW, Australia's FilmVictoria and NSW Film and Television Office, the New Zealand Film Commission, and the National Film and Video Foundation in South Africa) and support organizations (Ateliers du Cinema Europeen/ACE, CineMart, Pusan Promotion Plan/PPP, and the Sundance Institute). Additionally, IFP is working with the Korean Film Council (KOFIC) and for the second year will include a selection of projects from their KOFIC Lab for Korean American filmmakers in our Emerging Narrative section.
Source: IFP
CONTACT: Patrick Kowalczyk of MKPR for IFP, +1-212-627-8098,
patrick@mkpr.com
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