Monday, August 17, 2009

Art vs. Industry

There was an article in the New York Times this week about Hollywood's ever-diminishing investment in independent film distribution.

This is something I've been conscious of for years now - I came of age as a filmmaker in the era of Kevin Smith and Quentin Tarantino, but the idea that it's still possible to be discovered at a film festival and parlay your debut feature into a Hollywood career is pure mythology, promoted by the studio PR departments as a way to keep cheap labor and cheaper product (in the form of direct-to-DVD movies and late-night cable programming) available in abundance.

In my opinion.

The good news, as mentioned in the article, is that there are other methods emerging for making films sustainably, using the power of the internet and niche-marketing. Niche-marketing, of course, is just a fancy way of saying, "finding a community that cares deeply about the story you want to tell."

This development makes me optimistic that filmmaking will ultimately come back around to an archetypal idea of storytelling that's been largely neglected by the intensely industrialized film production process - an archetype based on mastery of narrative and character, rather than mastery of the art of procuring venture capital and schmoozing semi-famous b-list actors.

We're pretty confident, with this project, that we know our niche - we're still going to need money to get the film finished, but it's mostly going to go toward things like paying our rent while we work, half a dozen plane tickets, and several hundred tapes (at $7 a pop).

I'll share more on our fundraising efforts as they develop.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

The Team

At our meeting last Wednesday.

Snake

Dain

Randall

Charlie

Kevin

Monday, August 10, 2009

Anger Mismanagement

I've been deeply disturbed lately by the violent outbreaks at the town hall meetings about health care reform. And not just because I think universal healthcare is long overdue in America.

I'm not the only person to detect a powerful, toxic undercurrent of rage in America. Anger is a natural reaction when one is promised something, and that promise is not delivered upon. It seems to me that for at least one generation, if not two, the American populace as a whole - 300 million strong - has been sustained by vague promises of more... that life is only going to get better, for everybody, all the time.

I won't delve into who is responsible for that promise - we can all share the blame. The media, certainly, politicians, economists. But I think that all of us are complicit. We have chosen to believe in "more," as an ideal, as a promise - that more will make us happy, and that it is our due.

So this anger is out there, and in my opinion it is, to a great extent, appropriate - but what scares me is, I think that we, as a society, are less capable of processing anger in a healthy way than perhaps any culture in the history of the world.

Anger has been a major ingredient in every major sociopolitical change in human history - the French Revolution, the Declaration of Independence... but it's also been one of the root causes of every atrocity imaginable.

One of the main objectives of this documentary, one of my principal intentions, is a discussion of healthy anger - how men can feel and express that emotion with integrity, and without violence. Because it is possible, and I've seen it done.

But I think to a lot of people out there, there's very little distinction between anger and violence - either physical or emotional attack. This cannot be good for us as a society.

I think that many people have internalized taboos about anger - that it has no place in a corporate workplace, or in a happy household. That it should be contained and avoided at all costs. So, we've repressed it, to the point that we're not even aware that it's there, bubbling away deep beneath the surface. We feel powerless to combat the injustices of our jobs or the economy, we feel wronged by our cell service provider or our health insurer, or the guy who cut in front of us in traffic - and we don't know what to do with those feelings.

I want people - even white male conservatives - to feel empowered to express their anger. They have the right to be angry - everybody has the right to be angry, it's a basic human emotion.

But, based on my observation of our sociopolitical culture in recent years, I'm deeply afraid that our collective anger will be manipulated by the same people who have bought our complacent consumerism with the idea of "more" for the last fifty years, rather than encouraging us to use our anger to motivate positive change in our own lives and in our world.

For more historical context about the town hall violence - not very optimistic, I warn you - I recommend the lefty blog Orcinus.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Man Amok

From the woman-blog "Broadsheet" at Salon.com, where I get a lot of my man-related news, the story of a man so confused about his role in society and relationships that he went on a shooting spree at a gym, targeting women, specifically.

Sure, he needed therapy, maybe medication, maybe incarceration - but he also would have benefited from some kind of cultural conversation about what the hell he was supposed to do with his anger and frustration (not to mention probably shame and loneliness), besides go out and kill people...

Which is exactly the ambition of this documentary - to jumpstart that conversation; the sooner, the better.

Naming Rites

Finding the right name for a film often takes months and months - we didn't settle on "Journeyman" until we were nearly done editing the film, nearly three years into the process - and many of the names along the way make me cringe in retrospect...

"The Power of Boys"
"Double-Edged Sword"
"The Path to Manhood"
"Circle of Men"

... ugh. They're not all terrible, but not one of them is good. At least in my opinion - not one, if I saw it in the TV Guide channel scrolling by, would inspire me to check out the program.

And, with Journeyman, there was the issue of a current NBC show with the same title - but the name was right enough to justify the potential for confusion, in my opinion. I was happy to note that the show lasted less than one season - a victim of the writer's strike, I believe - and I imagine it'll be mostly forgotten in a few years.

Dain mentioned that he didn't like "Masculine Myth" as a name - sounds clinical, to him - and he perked up when I mentioned an alternative, "A Man's World" - which has some cultural caché already because of the James Brown song.

I also kind of like "Man Alive" - it's something that my grandfather would say, as a kind of G-rated exclamation, similar to how one might use "Hot Damn!"...

But who knows where the real title of the film will come from - it could be uttered by one of our interview subjects eighteen months from now.

Suggestions welcome.