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Cellphone Movies
A Commentary By Ron Steinman

 

Anyone who reads my columns knows I easily become out of sorts when I see attempts to have technology rule creativity. Sadly, it happens these days with regularity. Frankly, I prefer being even-tempered rather than angry. It takes too much energy to live that way permanently.

There is no greater sin than when someone uses what is new only because it is new. It usually ends up as a futile and uninspired attempt to be original when it is only a gimmick. Because many seem to worship technology over art there is always a new method of doing something. It does not mean that technique will work to enhance our understanding of the world or tease our senses in unexpected ways. For every new technology that arises, and they arise seemingly by the minute, there does not have to be a creative component. Usually when this happens the so-called artist subverts quality for the sake of what he or she perceives as innovation.

Clearly, what I think hardly matters to those who come up with what they believe are brilliant ideas about how to use these new tools. The
cellphone is the latest toy of businesses devoted almost exclusively to the young. There will always be those who are busy thinking how to use these means of communication for other than what they were intended. Though, in the case of the cellphone, their original intent, as a phone, has long gone in other directions.

Recently a third party sent me an e-mail from a filmmaker named Gregori who plans to shoot a movie using cellphones. In capital letters he nearly flames out when he writes, “WE WILL BE SHOOTING THE ENTIRE 100 MINUTE FEATURE FILM ON MOBILE PHONES!! That Simple.” Considering that cellphones have the capability to create video in very short takes, Gregori wants to put together a conglomeration of these to make a feature length movie. Will wonders never cease?

Is this a bright idea, or what? Unlike me, some will not dismiss it as lame brained. We know that cellphones can shoot short video sequences. Many of these so-called short films come in 10-second bursts. That about covers the attention span of most people in the desired advertising demographic. Advertisers, who really control the medium in ways they controlled any medium before, and their crass programmers are only looking for more eyeballs. The number of clicks per second generated by highflying fingers is the way they judge success. Success is not the quality they program. Pictures on cellphones are awful. That is a frequent complaint of mine but one largely ignored by our information-obsessed age. Send and get text messages. Get sports scores. Get the Dow Jones average for the day. Find movie start times. Locate a restaurant. Even get news alerts. But make a movie? I do not think so. Gregori, who attended film school, is looking to make a name for himself -- and anyone who joins his venture – by using this early 21st Century technology to make what he says will be a compelling film.

Let me tell you something more about the movie Gregori plans to produce. He calls his project a “micro-budget feature film.” He plans to audition actors, and then rehearse a cast and crew for his directorial debut feature film, which he plans to shoot for ten days in May or June this year. He says he will have a completed feature by August 2006. Gregori lays out his storyline that I will not go into. I find it weak and derivative, meaning not very original.

Gregori is offering anyone who owns a Sony Ericsson W900i mobile phone the opportunity to contribute to his feature. He wants “aspiring, hungry, up-and-coming filmmakers, video production people and even non-filmmakers” to contribute to his dream. He contends they will be part of a team that will usher in groundbreaking, guerrilla filmmaking. Sure. Everyone in the project has to work free, though. No one should expect anything other than a unique credit, he maintains.

Gregori goes on to explain how he will gather the material, and how he will edit it. Mainly though, he rails against the established filmmaker community in general, specifically in New York. Reading his e-mail gave me a headache. It is so passionate in its hype that it threatens to burn anyone who touches it. He lets us know that he received mostly negative responses from New York filmmakers for his ideas. This makes him angry and determined not to allow those rejections to deter him from his self-anointed role of creating something new in what he considers the normally staid world of filmmaking. He says, “most of these NYC filmmakers are too jaded or cynical to realize a great networking opportunity when it is laid at their feet…”

However, I will make no effort to see his film. It is obviously a clever ploy to attract attention. Clearly technology rules this project but where is the art?

There is always the chance I am wrong, and his idea is brilliant. But I don’t think so.

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At NBC News for 35 years, Ron Steinman was bureau chief in Saigon, Hong Kong and London, was a senior producer on Today and wrote and produced for Sunday Today. At ABC News Productions, he produced and wrote documentaries for A&E, TLC, Discovery, Lifetime and the History Channel. He has a Peabody, a National Headliner award, a National Press Club award, a International Documentary Festival Gold Camera Award, two American Women in Radio & Television awards and has been nominated for five Emmy's. He is a partner in Douglas/Steinman Productions, whose latest documentary, "Luboml: My Heart Remembers," aired on PBS' WLIW/21 and the History Channel in Israel, April 29, 2003. He is the author of, "The Soldiers 'Story", "Women in Vietnam," and most recently, "Inside Television's First War: A Saigon  Journal," University of Missouri Press, 2002.

 

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