~terry
Thu, Jan 21, 1999 (09:23)
seed
The Sundance Channel emerged out of the Sundance Movie Festival in the
Southwest. I get it on my satellite dish and it's on cable. It's a place
to catch those foreign flicks and avant garde movies.
~terry
Thu, Jan 21, 1999 (09:23)
#1
Sundance Enters Digital Era
by Jason Silverman
3:00 a.m. 21.Jan.99.PST
PARK CITY, Utah -- The quick evolution of digital filmmaking -- some are
calling it a digital revolution -- will be a focus of the 1999 Sundance
Film Festival, which begins here Thursday.
Just as 1915 is remembered for The Birth of a Nation, the first Hollywood
epic, and 1927 for The Jazz Singer, the first talking picture, 1998 could
go down in film history as a watershed for digital film.
Three digital movies reached theaters last year, including Bennett
Miller's documentary The Cruise, a horror film called The Last Broadcast,
and Thomas Vinterberg's The Celebration, a likely candidate for a foreign
language Oscar nomination.
But unless you were reading indie publications like Res magazine, you
might not have known. The New York Times and Roger Ebert, in reviews of
The Cruise and The Celebration, did not use the word digital.
Thanks in part to the festival's New Media and Technology Center, though,
Sundance '99 is taking stock of recent advances in digital technology.
During the 10 day festival, the New Media and Technology Center will host
numerous events marking the rise of digital filmmaking. Included are
demonstrations of Sony digital cameras and Avid nonlinear editing systems;
panel discussions on digital cinematography, sound, and editing; a seminar
exploring the changing realities of distribution in a digital world; and
"The Digital Shoot-Out," a side-by-side demonstration of various formats,
including Digital Beta, mini DV, Beta SP, Hi-8, and 35 mm film.
According to Ian Calderon, a founder of and senior consultant to the
Sundance Institute, the New Media and Technology Center, instituted in
1996, represents but one portion of Sundance's long history of commitment
to video and digital filmmaking. In 1981, the Sundance Filmmakers Lab
began using video as a "sketchpad" to work out problematic scenes before
committing them to film. Nearly two decades later, video, Calderon said,
is considered "finished product."
"The independent-film community in 1981 considered video second class,"
Calderon said. "Fast forward to 1999, and digital video is becoming an
accepted state-of-the-art technology for independent filmmakers. It can
take a while to size up a new technology, but video and digital video are
now fully engaged by the filmmaking community."
~KitchenManager
Fri, Jan 22, 1999 (00:10)
#2
it's a great movie channel...
~autumn
Sat, Jan 23, 1999 (17:25)
#3
Our cable company doesn't carry it at present.
~terry
Sat, Jan 23, 1999 (18:00)
#4
I get it on the dish out in Cedar Creek but not on our cable in Austin. I
don't like having to put in one of those little black boxes.