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Tips From Filmmakers in the News

(Via PRWeb) Tribe Pictures, of Chatham, New Jersey, produces films and videos all over the world for its Global 1000 corporate clients. Though Tribe shoots globally, it hires locally. According to Barbara Hennessy, VP of Production, “Sourcing local crews can save us quite a bit in travel expenses.” To get the best results from so many different crews, the company has “a set of production guidelines that it shares with its remote crews that details the studio’s approach to framing, product shots, B-roll footage and other deliverables, to ensure that work captured by different crews maintains a similar look and tone.” Read more here.

Remote Films, LLC’s Inverse won Best Sci-Fi Feature at this year’s Philip K. Dick International Science Fiction Festival. Inverse tells the story of a man who remembers nothing, but finds he comes from a parallel universe — then must face the consequences of what he’s done there. This is the first feature film for writer/director Matt Duggan, who says, “Filmmaking is a collaborative art form and a director needs to surround himself with incredible talent to produce a movie. I have an inner circle that made Inverse the film that it is.” Read all about it here.

Award-winning filmmaker Carolyn Jones found her documentary, The American Nurse, going in a different direction from what she had planned — and it earned her the American Academy of Nursing’s Johnson & Johnson Excellence in Media Award. As she explains, “I intended to make a film that celebrated nursing. I ended up gaining deeper insights into some of the social issues we face as a country, through the eyes of American nurses.” See the full story here.

 

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