Forty Four Films Selected to Compete in the 3rd Short Film Competition
Santo Domingo, September 23, 2011
Hundreds of Volunteers in Santiago, Higüey, Nagua and Puerto Plata Sign Up for the 5th Dominican Republic Global Film Festival
Santo Domingo, September 23, 2011
Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Meets with more than 120 Aspiring Volunteers in Preparation for its 5th Edition
Santo Domingo, September 6, 2011
The Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Invites Volunteers to Join the Fifth Edition of the Year´s Film Event
Santo Domingo, August 15, 2011
Directors of the Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Attend the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival (LALIFF)
Los Angeles, July 25, 2011
Dominican Republic Global Film Festival Opens Call for Entries for Third Short Film Competition
Santo Domingo July 11, 2011
“El Retrato de un Santo” Wins the First Short Film Contest Sponsored by Indomina’s ‘Dominicans Have Talent’
Santo Domingo, June 30, 2010
Filmmakers Thank President Fernandez for the Film Industry Promotion Law at a Meeting in the Juan Bosch Library
Santo Domingo, June 14, 2011
Dulce García Pereyra and Anapaula Gómez González Win Opportunity to Participate at Cannes Young Marketers Competition
Santo Domingo May 18, 2011
Web 3.0 is coming!
And the possibilities for small film producers are exciting!
Santo Domingo, November 20, 2010
The future is here, warns Jonathan McIntosh maker of the Donald Duck viral video in the Film Festival panel on Web 3.0.
“Web 3.0” is a nebulous concept: untold numbers of software developers know what they want it to be, and their collective aspirations are calling it into being. The people who work on it don’t use the term but whatever you call it, it is evolving rapidly with each click of the programmers’ keyboards.
Jon McIntosh tried to define it: “3.0 is about data and meta data rather document,
Take an Apple and an apple… semantic web would know the difference, so Web
3.0 involves AI, taxonomy, machine learning.”
In the audiovisual field he showed how its potential can develop. Already with HTML 5, he told the engrossed audience, “the visual representations of data with code is revolutionary, allowing interactive video, unlike third party software like Flash.” Among the advantages, it does not use bandwidth, and uses less processing power, with faster and smoother video quality.
Eugenio del Bosque Gómez went beyond the technical and considered how the new technologies will affect film making, leading to story-telling possibilities beyond the most obvious, with alternative story lines, layering, and dynamic interaction possible.
While the current stage already demonstrates the potential, he points out that there is more to come, better resolution up to HD, and web based 3D video processors. In this nexus between interactive games and narrative, it will soon be possible to remake stories with yourself as the hero and interact with the other characters.
Del Bosque points out that with the flux in the media there is a window of opportunity for a time. “ Film festivals are always trying to look for new stories but the studios are just telling the same stories and adding new technology,” he laments, “Across Latin America there are lots of very young people making films very cheap. They are challenging the models of story telling, fine tuning, the content with just a camera. The tools are in our hands and the media, film, TV, publishing, is all in crisis offering this opportunity for independent film makers to create content enclaves before the hegemony.
For a finale, McIntosh showed his acclaimed video “Right Wing Radio Duck” and explained how he had pulled together all the different elements he had remixed, and, so far at least, had avoided copyright issues by pleading the fair use doctrine.