Ron Galloway

Ron Galloway

Posted February 18, 2009 | 05:58 PM (EST)

What The Sundance Festival Can Learn From TED

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

This week Geoff Gilmore, the longtime director of the Sundance Film Festival took another job in film in New York. This presents an opportune moment for the powers that be at Sundance to take a look at itself within the context of other film festivals, and other conferences in general.

When "sex, lies, and videotape" launched Sundance into the public consciousness two decades ago, the festival was unique in discovering independent film and enabling the public to find out about those films. This year Steven Soderbergh returned to a Sundance festival in which news of the deal is more important than news of the film, a festival in which D-listers cravenly pimp for publicity, and the celebrity freebie booths get more coverage than the films. Sundance may need a reboot.

All of this takes place in an economy which will be suffering greatly for at least a few years, one in which business conferences and trade shows are being cancelled or scaled back left and right. Films will be harder to finance, and film festivals will find sponsorships harder to obtain. Sundance in one sense may benefit because many film festivals will disappear. On the other hand, they need to do something to actively engage the film loving public with Sundance, as opposed to the celebrity loving public who gets a tingle up their leg seeing Hulk Hogan's wife in Park City.

One conference model Sundance may want to examine is the TED conference, held annually in Long Beach. The impressive growth of TED is due to two factors. First, the conference is about ideas, indeed its motto is "Ideas worth spreading." From Bill Gates to J.J Abrams, Paola Antonelli to Aubrey de Grey, people pay a whole lot of money (several thousand dollars) to think laterally about subjects and concepts that may be new to them. It's a good sign to see people will still pay to learn.

TED involves the entire world in their conference by putting video all of the presentations online under a Creative Commons license. At last count there were 364. Some, such as Hans Rosling's graphic examination of poverty are astounding. Even the boring ones are still worth watching. But these free videos, which I would happily pay for, involve the viewer and bond them with the conference. It's a brilliant way to spread ideas.

Film is an art form, not just a product. Sundance should not be just a deal market or a screening opportunity for distributors. Film is an idea. In TED parlance, film is an "idea worth spreading." Kubrick, Kieslowski, and Kurosawa all had ideas worth spreading and discussing. The directors of the Sundance Film Festival, the most important such festival in the world, might want to take a cue from TED in shaping the future content, and the availability of said content, to a global (not just Park City) audience hungry to learn more about the art of film, as opposed to the art of the deal.

This week Geoff Gilmore, the longtime director of the Sundance Film Festival took another job in film in New York. This presents an opportune moment for the powers that be at Sundance to take a look a...
This week Geoff Gilmore, the longtime director of the Sundance Film Festival took another job in film in New York. This presents an opportune moment for the powers that be at Sundance to take a look a...
 
Comments
4
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:

I've been attending Sundance since 1987 and TED more recently, since 2004. Getting to attend both is a sincere privilege. Both events are reasonably exclusive and both have grown in popularity and influence since the ‘80s. Both are forums for insiders to discover new talent as well as get inspired in their own work.

But other than the random cautionary tale inherent in the risks of growth, tales common to hundreds of successful companies that expand their markets, I’m not sure there is much Sundance can truly learn from TED. What Sundance could do, however, is to present all the films in competition online for the duration of the festival. Charge a flat fee, and make the films sharable, Digg-able, and hits could be uncovered and directors could still reap the rewards of getting into theaters. Like TED simulcast, you’d be privy to the exclusive content, and have online forums to chat and share. Sure, it’s not the same as overhearing Weinstein rant in the corner booth at Chimayo, but it remains true to the festival’s roots, to give independent filmmakers their first audiences and help them find larger ones. The web is good at exactly this kind of effort, and could be utilized better. But this isn’t learning from TED so much as utilizing the Internet better.

(Excerpted from http://droidmaker.blogspot.com/2009/02/what-sundance-can-learn-from-ted.html)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 AM on 02/22/2009
- Ken Volok I'm a Fan of Ken Volok 25 fans permalink
photo

Bravo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 PM on 02/19/2009
- cousinavi I'm a Fan of cousinavi 10 fans permalink
photo

Sadly such is the nature of things - the ding in sich (probably misspelled that)...
There is a difference between the creation of a product for market and a smart person getting up in front of other smart people to talk about what shivers their willy.
Both eminently watchable, and I'll take TED over LOTR anytime...
but think of the popcorn vendors!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 02/19/2009

This is a great idea, no doubt, and would seem almost timely except that Sundance has been doing this for almost 10 years online, I know because I watch it every year ... and it's freakin' free too. As someone who can't make it to the festival, I really do feel as if I'm there as every January the nice folks post panels, shorts and a ton of other stuff to feed my indie jonze -- maybe they should charge for it, yeah. I'd pay for it cause now I look forward to it ...

www.sundance.org/festival -- They also just started on YouTube here too
http://www.youtube.com/sundancefilmfestival

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 02/19/2009
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect