FkN News
FkN in Hamburg, Annecy, Grimstad and La Rochelle
FkN
will be out and about during June. In the beginning of the month, Jing
Haase is attending the Hamburg International Short Film festival,
expanding the FkN network and Heidi Elise Christensen will bring 5
producers to the animation market MIFA in Annecy, France, where FkN
hosts the Nordic Producers' Stand and serves as a matchmaker and
facilitator.
During the Norwegian Shortfilm Festival in
Grimstad, taking place mid-June, Karin Johansson-Mex is offering
individual consultancy to filmmakers with documentary projects in
development regarding Nordic and International financing.
Last
but not least, Katrine Kiilgaard is in place at Sunny Side of the Doc
in La Rochelle, France, by the end of the month. She will be joined at
the Nordic Producers' Stand by 27 representatives from 16 production
companies, who will enjoy a wide array of professional and social
events arranged by FkN besides the official programme offered by Sunny
Side of the Doc. You can learn more about FkN's International Market
Platform here.
|
|
Nordisk Forum Deadline Approaching
The deadline for submission of projects for Nordisk Forum for Co-financing of Documentaries is 16 June.
This
years edition of Nordisk Forum takes place in Malmö, Sweden, 29-30
September and welcomes documentary projects from Denmark, Finland,
Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Greenland, The Faroe Islands, Latvia,
Lithuania and Estonia. For more information, click here.
Focus: New Nordic and International Initiatives
New Distribution Scheme from Nordisk Film & TV Fond
Since
mid-April, the Distribution Scheme from Nordisk Film & TV Fond has
changed. The Fund's distribution support will now operate as a Direct
Support scheme instead of a guarantee against losses, therefore freeing
distributors form the obligation to reimburse the grant. Another major
change in the distribution scheme is the payment of the support, now
consisting of two installments: one at signature of the contract and
one at submission of invoice of P&A spend. The Fund's distribution
support will still be capped to the level of the distributor's own
investment.
Nordisk Film & TV Fond has
decided to change the distribution scheme to make it easier and more
beneficial for Nordic distributors to apply and to encourage a larger
array of Nordic distributors to apply. For further information, see
Nordisk Film & TV Fond's guidelines.
Nordic Cultural Campaign
Nordic
cooperation will now play a more active role in international
competition on welfare, values and jobs. At least if it is up to the
five Nordic ministers of culture. A new cultural campaign aims to
improve the position of the Nordic Region in global competitiveness and
to strengthen the creative industries and international dialogue,
according to the Nordic ministers of culture, who have just agreed on a
joint globalisation. As the first follow-up to the ministers'
globalisation initiative, the ministers of culture will approach the
Norddic ministers of trade directly with a proposal for joint ventures
in the creative industries.
Movieurope Launched
The
VOD portal Movieurope has been launched. On Movieurope, the whole world
can watch and rent films from the Nordic countries and the rest of
Europe. The portal is launched in Danish, but at the end of 2008, it
will have an English and a German version as well and contain 500
films. In 2009, it will be versioned in 10 additional European
languages.
Movieurope is run by Filmmakers' Independent Digital
Distribution (FIDD), who also run the TV channel Skandinavia, and the
ambition is to become the largest distributor of European films. By
2013, the aim is to present 50.000 European films in 27 languages.
Check it out on www.movieurope.dk.
New European TV Database Launched
During
MIP TV in Cannes, European Audiovisual Observatory (EAO) and the
European Commission (DG Communication) launched a new European TV
Database, called MAVISE. MAVISE will provide basic data on all TV
channels available in the EU, Croatia and Turkey and is accessible to
the general public free of charge.
For each
country, MAVISE contains a general description of the TV landscape, TV
operators and technical transmitters, the names of the bodies granting
TV licenses, basic data on the population, number of TV households and
digital TV penetration rate.
MAVISE already
contains key information on more than 2500 companies, over 2700 TV
channels and the line-up of more than a hundred distributors. The aim
is to compile a list of the 6000 to 7000 channels in Europe by the end
of 2008. For more information, click here.