IFHY is Now Available on Hulu and Amazon VOD

The little short film that could is now available at major outlets. Click the buttons below to watch it online at either Hulu or Amazon, or to have it downloaded directly to your Tivo via Amazon VOD.


Eloquent Graffiti – Podcast Six – First Cast & Crew Meeting

Myself, Daniel Carmody, Jamie Cobb, Matt Garrett and actors Mary Elise Hayden and Dusty Sorg have our first cast and crew meeting to further develop the short film and choose character names. Whenever possible, I like to let actors pick their character names to help build a sense of ownership. More and more, these characters will become less mine and less Dan’s, and truly owned and defined by Dusty and Mary Elise.

Eloquent Graffiti – Podcast One – Intro

This podcast introduces the series we’ll be doing for the short film Sabi Pictures is producing for the 2009 DVXFest.

Trains Connect, People Collide

so right off the bat, I spent the afternoon with Jamie Cobb, the editor of [URL="http://www.sabipictures.com/heartofnow"]HEART OF NOW[/URL]. We were in the Atlanta airport waiting for our flight to LAX when I read about LossFest on my iphone. We immediately began discussing some ideas for the LOSS theme. in the interest of transparency, some of the key points of the discussion were as follows…

—pitches for a framework for a story: something that moves much faster and tighter than [URL="http://www.sabipictures.com/ifhy"]IFHY[/URL], but that resonates on a similar (very human) level.
—”blue sky” session (meaning no ideas are bad ideas at this point) where we throw out ideas for scenes, dialogue, ways to reveal story and character beats, etc.
—listed the obvious choices for this theme and pitfalls to avoid.
—actors we’d like to work with, Sabi regulars were named and some new faces too.
—potential for an unusually high level of collaboration between myself and other filmmakers.
—potential to incorporate a more interactive experience for the audience (you’ll see!!!)
—potential to do what is essentially a short “proof of concept” from the [URL="http://www.sabipictures.com/wanderlust"]WANDERLUST[/URL] universe of characters and storylines we are developing.
—a truly NO-BUDGET endeavor to make something real and compelling and beautiful to look at without throwing a bunch of money at the screen.

Reflecting on From Here To Awesome

To my mind, the biggest problem (as a filmmaker and cinephlie) is that the system is set up in such a way that audiences don’t have TRUE choices for content. The system favors the safe and familiar and “what’s worked before”. I wonder how many cutting edge, iconoclastic filmmakers have been passed over in recent decades because some suit couldn’t reduce their work to “it’s like RoboCop meets Pretty Woman”? I’d like to see this flipped on its head so that audiences have a portal through which they can access a vast array of content on demand and pull it toward them, rather than having distributors push selected content at them. This portal would navigate though a variety of methods including searches, intelligent recommendations, keyword tagging and metadata, and good old word of mouth through a social network that would also allow fans to interact and communicate with filmmakers thru live and recorded video as well as text-based discussion. For the suits reading this, “its like DirecTV meets Amazon VOD meets iTunes Store meets Facebook meets Google meets Video iChat meets Coppola’s Little Fat Girl all packaged into a 60″ HD television with webcam, harddrive, and broadband built-in”.

If today we are “Here” and our goal is to get to “Awesome”, i think we are right on the brink of the next “ipod moment” — a moment that changes the way content finds its audience. today’s independent filmmaker is moving closer to what we at Sabi Pictures call the interdependent filmmaker — one who embraces the value of community-based solutions for everything from education and production needs to sharing your audience with like-minded artists. my vision of “awesome” is a universal framework that supports the artist and his or her audience cyclicly. allowing the filmmaker to retain ownership of his or her work is paramount to the evolving models of distribution and I believe that Arin Crumley’s idea for a universal distribution agreement is a brilliant concept for defining a new relationship between filmmakers and outlets. the technology is such that the only thing holding back the low budget (yet equally skilled, compelling and entertaining) filmmaker from monetizing their efforts is an audience equipped with the tools to find them.

Being a part of the first wave of the FHTA project has been a massive awakening and education in terms of elevating my understanding of what can be done with a motion picture once it’s locked and ready for the world. It has emboldened me to truly take ownership of my films, to give myself permission to fail, to assert and define my place in the film world, to brave the ever-evolving models of self-distribution and to have courage in rejecting the conventional route toward distribution for independents such as myself.

the distribution opportunities provided by FHTA were not an end result in and of themselves. they were a door that opened to a whole new journey. I learned to pursue these opportunities with vigilance, to build upon them and to let them inspire new ideas for building an audience. if you’re not pushing your filmmaking forward in some manner every single day, then you’d better go out and hire a great publicist (and a team of interns) to do it for you. that, or turn in your indie credentials right now. haha!

I received a vast “DIY” education from Lance Weiler and Arin Crumley. I now understand how to build and sustain an audience and the importance of creating a framework for the filmmaker to interact and make himself or herself available to the people drawn to the work. I now know the value of transparency and the importance of giving myself permission to fail as I experiment with the newly emerging distribution models. I now know that I’m not alone in wanting to change the status quo by retaining ownership of my work and I know it will happen for us soon. It is only a matter of time, planning and effort.

From Here To Awesome

okay, it’s monday. midnight and change. so i’m going to spill the beans on the distribution deal I have.

it comes down to this. I submitted IFHY to ‘From Here To Awesome’. this is a discovery and distribution project run by Lance Weiler (Head Trauma, The Workbook Project) designed around a “pull” distribution model. meaning, instead of a distributor deciding what films to make available to the audience, the audience decides what they want to see distributed.

and the audience selected IFHY.

http://showcase.fromheretoawesome.com/2008/07/i-fcking-hate-you/

so now I find myself in a wonderful situation. I have a film that cost practically nothing to make. i spent about $2000 to promote and send it to festivals. I have a deal in place with Heretic Films and IndieFlix who are acting as sales agents on my behalf. they have made deals with Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, Amazon Unbox, Joost, cable companies for VOD and many others that aren’t coming to mind right now. I receive 90% of revenue generated from sales, rentals and advertising played in front of my short online. there will also be theatrical distribution in the very near future as a block of “From Here To Awesome Showcase Shorts”.

and best of all, I retain the rights to IFHY. this deal is non-exclusive so I can keep sending it to fests, selling my own “Special Edition” DVD and HD digital downloads, and using this exposure to elevate those sales and the “brand” of Sabi Pictures.

and that’s it. it’s hitting the trades tomorrow. I’m proud and fortunate to be on the cutting edge of the evolving distribution models being defined minute by minute. some google alerts have already come in to show that Variety has something on it. good things ahead