Thursday, October 31, 2013

Happy Halloween-- Its HORROR in the Asylum

THIS HALLOWEEN NOTHING IS MORE FASCINATING THAN HUMAN MONSTERS.

Director, Geraldine Winters sucks in the audience with 71 minutes of Horror in a film that has you gripping your seat.

The Banewood Asylum houses the mentally ill who have become victims of unethical procedures and mad doctors. Patients have disappeared or been found dead under suspicious circumstances. Young women seem to be the victims most often of a medical staff who's methods hearken to the dark days of psychiatric treatments. The doctors like to use Psycho-Surgery to remove parts of their brains to quell the patients violent tendencies, at times turning them into little more than zombies, that become more violent than ever.

AN INSTANT HALLOWEEN FAVORITE. 

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

5 Best Film Fests You Should Be A Part of OR At Least Attend

Filmmakers have their own ways of getting inspired. But among them should be attending 1 or 5 Movie Festivals. Here are Shami Media's Top Picks.


1. King Cannes- Cannes, France 
The "masterpiece" of festivals, most years it attracts the latest from the world's top directors and emerging filmmakers. 

2. Sundance Film Festival- Park City, USA
Still the United States' most important film festival, Sundance is the cradle of the American indie movement. While the combination of economic downturn and massive restructuring within the industry have meant that deals made at the fest are not where they were five or more years ago, it is still an important place to do business and even its detractors would not dare miss it. The festival continues to showcase the most anticipated titles in new American cinema.
3.Toronto International Film Festival- Toronto, Canada
Toronto is an early must-stop in the long lead up to awards season with Fall titles using the event as a crucial launching pad for their release. Considered by many as North America's most important film festival, Toronto premieres first-rate titles from established and emerging filmmakers alike, many only days (or even hours) after their world premieres in Venice

4. South By SouthWest- Austin, Texas
This may be a controversial choice, but we're going for it. We believe that unlike any other festival, SXSW is uniquely establishing itself as the event on the cusp of technological innovation. while redefining what a festival is. SXSW made its name as a center showcasing new music. Later it established its film and interactive events, which have themselves rivaled the music component for attention

5. New York Film Festival- New York, New 
While not exactly what might be called a "discovery festival," the NYFF is nevertheless an important American showcase defining the most important voices in world cinema. The highly curated event typically picks a select number of films from the world's top film festivals, while also adding a more finite number of lesser known important titles from emerging filmmakers.

[TRAILER] Spanglish Girls

Official Selection of the 2009 Latino Nights Festival, NYC







She threw out her husband for cheating, then later discovered she's pregnant with his child. But instead of telling him, she permits her old girlfriend, a closet lesbian, to move in with her. It's when he finds out that the trouble begins. The cast which includes Belange Rodriguez as Milly, Melissa Gonzalez, Omar Hernandez, Lia Ochoa, Sara Dunster, Sam Hale ad Lloyd De Leon.









Spanglish Girls Directed by Rob Santana
Distributed by Shami Media

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Use Social Media To Capitalize Your Movie

Shami Media want to create the ultimate experience via digital platforms. Follow us on all our social networks for information on upcoming releases, distribution news, new Shami Media clients and everything digital that you love; from music to movies to books. Sham Media puts it all at the palm of your hand. Make sure to connect with us and share with us your digital experience.

Twitter @ShamiMedia
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Here are 10 Movies that Capitalized Using Social Media.


1: The Hunger Games
Continuing with its overnight fame from the books, the Hunger Games movie launched a thoroughsocial marketing plan that worked. They funneled fans from Facebook and Twitter to a website where they could register as a citizen of the make believe-world. You’d also be able to share your profile images across your social sites, and interact with other fans.
#2: Monsters vs. Aliens
This Dreamworks hit offered fans a chance to win tickets through a Facebook app. You could also use this app to buy tickets for yourself and your family. Facebook was the central arena for Dreamwork’s campaign, which turned out to be a resounding success.
#3: Paranormal Activity
Potentially the most loved and most successful horror movie of 2007, was created for a measly $15 million and made over $150 million dollars at the box office. This was all thanks to the Facebook page that fueled word of mouth hype.
#4: Alice in Wonderland
Disney launched a viral Twitter and Facebook campaign that allowed fans to become loyal subjects of the red queen, the white queen, or a disloyal subject of the mad hatter. The largest army of followers would then receive access to an exclusive trailer, that no-one else could see. It was an instant viral hit. Even today the Facebook page has 10 million fans.
#5: Hot Tub Time Machine
This comedy used Facebook and ‘Eventful’ a screening app, to request screenings in their area. Get enough people to sign on, and it creates awareness. It also automatically makes screening the film in a particular area worthwhile.
#6: Toy Story 3
Pixar and Disney focused on creating a lot of viral video commercials with ‘Lots o’ Huggin Bear’ a key character in the movie. People loved these ads and shared them all over the place, creating a lot of viral buzz on sites like Youtube, MySpace and Facebook.
#7: Inception
Warner Brothers cottoned onto the whole viral marketing game, and flooded the internet with viral-social campaigns. One of these was to use a location based service like Foursquare to promote the movie, only the service they used was called SCVNGR.
#8: Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows Part 2
This movie caused a 29 million strong Facebook page following, with 100,000 new users a day leading up to the release. Behind the scenes clips and images, along with interviews were the cause of this boom. At the launch, Twitter received live pics from the premier, from the HP team using the Twitpic app. Youtube received an exclusive live stream of the event.
#9: TRON: Legacy
One of the largest campaigns online can be attributed to Disney’s TRON film. Already a cult classic, fans flocked to find out more about the new movie. Twitter was the main site used as the repository for all viral TRON info. It worked like a charm.
#10: Twilight Movies
You can’t mention movies on social media without Twilight. It was the first movie ever to reach 1 million followers on Twitter. The Twitter page focused on everything Twilight, press releases, blogs, pictures, exclusive news, video clips and fan comments.

Source: Social Media Today

13 Ways to Cast A-List Actors in Microbudget Films


My film Between Us is about to come out in theaters and one of the questions I’ve been asked at some of the 22 festivals in seven countries I’ve been to (and yes, that sound you hear is my feet splashing on the beach when I won the Grand Jury Prize in the Bahamas) is how the hell I got a cast like Julia Stiles, Taye Diggs, Melissa George and David Harbour in a movie that according to Kickstarter only cost $10,000? So let me explain…
1. Choose Castable Material. One reason I chose to adapt an Off-Broadway play in the first place is I knew I’d find good, castable material that no one else was turning into a feature. I actually turned down Beau Willimon’s play Farragut North, and George Clooney turned it into Ides of March and got a happy ending from my sloppy seconds. It was good, but I knew would be hard to adapt for a low budget, if need be. But with Between Us, I knew it was at its heart four people in two rooms — how hard could that be? More importantly, the four parts were incredibly well written, with great chew-the-scenery moments for each actor. They were also written for 30-ish-year-old actors, and the two female parts were especially rich. That’s key: There are far more working (and famous) actresses than actors, and there aren’t enough good parts for them. So if you can get a script with really great female roles, you’re golden.
2. Assemble a Team. Contrary to popular wisdom, you don’t needan A-list casting director. What you need is someone who cansound like a credible casting director on the phone. I teamed up with Alison Buck, who’d been recommended by my pal, director Matthew Harrison. Alison had recently moved to L.A. from New Zealand and been working as a casting director in her spare time while also holding down a day job as a manager. Which meant that she had an office, a phone, knew the casting lingo and had the confidence to sound like the movie was happening. Yes, she had some contacts in the agenting world, but that’s not why we got her. She also had the stamina to stay committed to the film for what wound up being over four years.
But the casting director was only part of the team. I also needed to surround myself with a credible group of producers. To that end, I rounded up New Yorker Mike Ryan, who’d had seven films at Sundance. His claim to fame was helping discover Amy Adams in Junebug. I got Hans Ritter in L.A., who’d been instrumental in discovering Ellen Page in Hard Candy. Barry Hennessey was a four-time Emmy winning producer on Amazing Race… and had been my line producer on my previous film. And to top it off, we got Dana Altman, my producing partner on my first film, and Robert Altman’s grandson… not bad casting genes in his DNA! And of course, as the co-founder of Slamdance, and with some good casting under my belt for my previous film (Open Housewith Oscar-nominee Sally Kellerman, Anthony Rapp, Kellie Martin, et al), there was proof that I knew how to work with at least somewhat fancy actors.
3. Aim High. So with that team on paper, we decided to tell people we were making the film for $2 or 3 million! This was in 2007-8, so it didn’t sound so crazy at the time. And at that budget, the prevailing wisdom was to offer something called “Schedule F” which SAG says is a $65,000 flat rate. Now of course, we didn’t have a dime. So that meant we were doing “finance contingent” casting. Which means some of the agents and managers will take you seriously (10% of $65k is still enough to support at least a small coke habit), so they’ll get someone in the office to do coverage on the script and it gets in the system.
4. Go to New York. Something I learned by casting both Open House and Between Us is to target junior agents at the big agencies — and specifically ones in their New York offices. The L.A. talent agents are all running around like crazy trying to get their actors booked into pilot season. Television is where the long-term money is for the agencies. The L.A. people have neither the time nor inclination to worry about indie films, no matter what their budget. But, the New York branches of those same agencies spend more time trying to get prestige Broadway jobs for their L.A.-based high profile actor clients. Consequently, they’re also better attuned to know which actors in their clientele are inclined to want to do (and can afford to do) meaty, “actor-y” roles — whether they be on stage or in indie films. In general, the New York agents also tend to have gone to classier Ivy League schools, think they’re smarter, and have more time on their hands to actually sit down and read a script (and not just pass it on to a bitter intern to do coverage).
The sweet spot is to find a junior agent in New York — someone who just finished being an assistant, just got their own desk, but doesn’t yet have their own assistant. These are the hungry young bucks, eager to make a mark for themselves by discovering great material and prove themselves to their senior agents, A-list clients and the big bosses in L.A. And without their own assistants, they’ll actually answer their own phone!
5. Be Bi-Coastally Curious. From New York, come back to L.A.. This confuses the agencies, in a good way. If they think you’re bi-coastal, they will take you more seriously (Scott Rudin has offices in L.A. and N.Y., why shouldn’t you?). If you live in L.A., get a 917 number. If you live in N.Y., get a 323. Leave messages at 6:00 AM in L.A. or 9:00 PM in N.Y. Then play them off against each other: “Oh yes, that sitcom actor’s good, but your N.Y. colleague has this other Broadway actor that seems more… how do I put this? Substantial. Do you have any feature actors who are better?”
6. Don’t Have a List! Every director has some sort of list in mind about your dream cast. Forget it! You will never get your dream cast. Not all of them, not on your budget, and not on the week you want to start shooting. And then when you do cast someone else, you will always view them as inferior to the person you had in mind when you wrote the script or made your list. This is an important concept both creatively and practically.
Agents spend most of their time soullessly getting offers and pushing them on to their clients. For this, they went to Penn? So, when you meet with that junior agent in NY, tell him or her about the roles, and then say, “Who do you think would be good in this?” All of a sudden, it empowers the agent and makes them emotionally vested in the film. They will undoubtedly come up with the exact same list of clients that you would have thought of from scouring IMDbPro, but sometimes they will surprise you and come up with a new client they just signed, or someone bigger than you thought you could get. The point is, it will be their idea, and they will work ten times harder to get that person than if you had suggested them. Now they have something to prove to you (and their colleagues), and not the other way around.
7. Develop Relationships with Agents Yourself. No matter how good or powerful your casting director is, you as the filmmaker need to develop and cultivate relationships with talent agents and managers yourself: Buy them coffee in Park City, take them out to breakfast in Venice, share sushi on St. Mark’s. Whatever it takes. This is much better time spent than cultivating relationships with actors: You could spend 20 years buddying up to the next Tom Cruise, but when you finally need to cast your famous BFF, they might happen to be in rehab that month, and you’re screwed. But agents or managers who you know will always have other clients available, and will have them for not just this film, but for all your films in the future. That junior agent in New York will be a senior manager in L.A. by the time you make your next movie.
Even if you’ve gotten an A-list casting director, you need to develop these relationships yourself. You may have gotten lucky with a casting director this time, but next year when you want to make a Dogma 95 film in your kitchen, you won’t have a casting director to fall back on. It’s also more impressive for the young agents and managers to speak with the “director” and not just the casting director. Alison and I had a great system: If she contacted an agent, she would constantly refer to “the director” following up with them, and when I knew an agent, I would refer to my “casting director” as following up with them. It gave the impression that we had a real team who cared what that agent thought. And of course we always said our “assistants” would be dropping off a script, though invariably the assistant was me.
8. Play the Agency Game. As friendly as you get with one agent, make sure you’re also friends with another. Typically you get three bites at the apple with an agency: If three actors pass on the same script, they will stop returning your calls. And if all your actors do come from the same agent, then the power shifts, and you’re beholden to that agent — for better or for worse. To keep your casting momentum going, it’s best to play the agencies off against each other. Use the nuggets of success with one agency (“Oh, you know WME’s got the script out to Jennifer…”) as leverage to get the other agencies to move (“Well, yes, I suppose you could slip it to Ben for the weekend read”). Likewise, play the managers off against the agencies. Remember, it’s a game. Have fun with it! (And to really see how much fun it is to play agencies against each other, see this.)
9. Bait and Switch. With Between Us, just as we were getting a great cast, the economy fell through in 2008 and there was no way to make a film for any budget. Luckily for me, I got a book deal on a completely unrelated project, and after it had run its course two years later, we came back to Between Us — but this time the approach was to do it on a microbudget. Yes, we raised $10,000 on Kickstarter (back when that was considered a successful campaign) but indirectly raised another $30,000 or so. That was enough money to be able to pay actors $100 a day (SAG ultra-low scale if your budget is under $200k).
The crew wouldn’t get paid, but that’s our problem, not the actors. The script was exactly the same as before; we never rewrote it for a smaller budget. So we could go back to the same agents and managers we were in touch with before and they would still take our calls and use the same coverage as before. Legally, if you have a backed offer they have to pass it on to their clients, no matter how small that offer is. And frankly, an agent will take you more seriously if you have 100% of a $40,000 budget in the bank than if you have zero percent of a $3 million budget in the bank.
10. Set a Start Date. This is a lesson I learned from Robert Altman: Set a start date, and they will come. For most actors — particularly those who’ve been on TV series, or big-budget movies — they don’t need the money. It really doesn’t matter whether it’s $65,000 or $100 a day. They’re doing it for the roles. The key thing is the start date. If they’re available, they will want to work. Actors abhor a vacuum in their schedules. And there’s nothing agents hate more than whiny clients calling them every day asking why they’re out of work. The start date is more important than the budget: No one wants to get left behind.
11. Make it Real. As soon as you start asking questions like “does your client have any peanut allergies we should be aware of?” (since all you can afford to feed them is PB&J) or “what is your client’s hat size?” (to give the impression that you’ve already hired a wardrobe department), the agents will believe that you really are making the movie.
12. Magnetic Balls of Iron. You need some serious cojones to pull all this off properly. It helps to know that you have backup actors in a pinch. For literally years, I had been meeting actors for coffee (it’s axiomatic that actors don’t eat, so you can take them to reasonably nice places and not go broke). So I knew we could always make the film with talented actors if we wanted. Remember, as you cast, most of these so-called attachments will fall through. The micro-budget indie will always get trumped by the Spielberg film or pilot shoot for Scandal. But as long as they don’t all fall through the same day, you’re fine. In our case, Taye Diggs originally thought he was signing up to be in a movie with Michael C. Hall, America Ferrera and Kerry Washington. But thankfully, as they all dropped out at different times, Taye stuck with the film and we were able to build up our cast again. And of course, his agent was now even more motivated to help us out (which he definitely did).
13. Take Advantage of Others’ Misfortune. As you get closer to that start date, your ability to cast closer to the A-list actually increases. In our case, the best example was Julia Stiles. She’d always been floating around our lists (I lied; of course we had lists), but I knew she was booked for six months in a Neil LaBute play on Broadway. But her agent called me in a panic: Despite rehearsing for a month, that play’s financing had fallen through two hours before, and they needed to fill Julia’s schedule. Was I interested? Yes, make the offer! (I knew her manager was already a fan of the script, having taken him to breakfast in Venice some three years before). Within 24 hours, Julia called me and said she was in. Two weeks later, she was in my kitchen rehearsing the movie.
Now then, was all this the work of years of careful preparation and planning? Or did we simply take advantage of an actress in her most vulnerable emotional state and swoop in to save her? It doesn’t matter. The point is we made the movie with amazing actors who delivered performances that are already winning awards and critical plaudits.
And by the way, remember that so-called $10,000 budget? Once we did get our actors and started shooting, we got a very nice financier to invest in the film. His check may have only cleared three days before the END of principal photography, but clear it did, and even most of the crew got paid. It may not be the ideal way to make a movie, but it’s definitely one way.


Source: http://filmmakermagazine.com/72600-13-ways-to-cast-a-list-actors-in-microbudget-films/

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Are You An Original Content Writer?


Shami Media is an independent media company that specializes in helping your dreams become reality. If you’ve fantasized about being on the silver screen, Shami Media can help by producing, directing, and editing your movie idea. From the first stages of production to the final step of distribution, Shami Media is your personal guide to helping transform your ideas into a movie you can hold in your hands. All it takes is an idea. If you’ve got an idea, a screenplay, or a trailer, then we want to hear about it. Shami Media’s current projects include everything from self-defense guides to children’s entertainment to investigative pieces about social awareness. Genre is no barrier to success at Shami Media. Turn your ideas into a short movie, TV show, feature film, or reality show today. Make movie magic with Shami Media.

Submit your fully owned rights and in HD for consideration at contact{at}shamimedia.com

Specifically looking for content in the following genres
MMA
Xtreme Sports
Independent Films of any genre

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

5 Must Haves To Get Your Film Distributed

Launching a film on your own can seem like a mystery. Where do I begin? Success does not come easy and there are unprecedented flukes. It does not always seem promising due to lack of or proper funding, improper execution, and or poor timing. It is very challenging to predict the market and the audience taste but it is the single most important step when trying to get the film distributed.


The earlier you can prepare for distribution the better, and the wise indie producer will begin this process in pre-production. Let's get into it



1. Know Your Audience
Probably the most important thing a producer can do to maximize a film's chances, and yet something that is often left unexplored. A lot of time would be saved if you asked yourself, "Who is the audience for this film?" Ask this question before investing a dime in your project.



2. Fill Your Toolkit
Marketing materials are the tools of the distribution trade; the more of them that you have available prior to distribution, the better off you will be. Many a filmmaker submits their project to a potential distributor without a trailer, no discernible artwork, and a lackluster logline. Fill your toolkit with the things that put your film in the best possible light. 
Remember, the distributor is an audience member. They probably have sixty other DVDs on their desk. The ones with compelling press kits and trailers will get first dibs at her attention. It's just the way it goes. 

3. Do Your Research
Somewhere out there, your future distributor is watching yet another terrible film, wishing they had the next “Supersize Me” on their desk instead. But not every distributor is looking for the same thing. Take the time to research distribution companies and come up with a short list of the best possible fits for your film. The same can be said for sales agents, broadcasters, festivals, competitions and anyone else that programs content for an audience.


4. Chart Your Course
The path from development to distribution can be long and winding. The successful producer will create a 'road map' for this journey long before they take their first step. Films don't generally do well by mistake, and you should not lean on providence to complete your journey. Have a Plan A, B, and C for distribution. And have it well before your film premieres. Premiere status is the only bargaining chip many producers have. Film festivals and theaters are in the business of selling tickets. Distributors aggregate views at the highest possible purchase price. And having it first is what fills those seats and moves those units.



5. Prepare for Success
This last step is simple and elegant, yet can be enormously complicated. Have goals, outlined and understood by all involved. It starts with the simple question, “What result would make this project a success?” The answer will be as unique as the film. For some, it's having the maximum amount of people see the project. For others, it's helping to enact a change in policy or public thinking. For others it's positioning the director to have his next film made, or nabbing a positive review in the New York Times. And then, of course, there's money. Making as much of it as possible.

If you don't know the answer to this question, you won't see the result you are looking for. Research similar films and track their returns. Study their numbers whenever possible, at each step of their rollout. Manage expectation, of the director and the investors, and communicate these expectations clearly to your distributor. If you are not on the same page, you will end the journey dissatisfied.


Source-filmslatemagazine.com

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

What is Shami Media?

Shami Media is your final destination once you have come up with a creative concept that is ready to be taken to the next level. Be the visionary you are and let us handle the rest. Our goal is to work with new talents, aspiring artists, and creative visionaries to create all manner of film across all genres. With our incredible team behind your project we can assure you an end product you will be proud of.

Our company combines technology with imagination to produce socially aware content, international issues, self-defense how-to videos, children’s projects, mixed martial arts, luxury cars and motorcycles, wild spring breaks, and much more! We are committed to tapping into the wealth of creativity that makes new filmmakers successful.

Are you ready to be a part of a ground breaking company that is committed to bringing the best feature films, short movies, TV shows, and reality shows available to our site and promoting the talent involved with the creative process?

For more information visit ShamiMedia.com and submit your idea NOW!