
When the film festival summit, the
IFFS, wrapped last night with an open bar reception that suddenly, strangely turned into a cash bar, those remaining were left wondering what exactly this “tradeshow” had delivered. Divided into keynotes, panels, and valuable group sessions, the conference was useful for newbie and smaller fests to learn from the few established events. Telluride’s
Gary Meyer, Toronto’s
Piers Handling (pictured giving a keynote) along with cohorts from
SXSW, AFI FEST,
Denver,
Austin film fest and others, spoke to just how this new “industry” was doing.
It doesn’t take much research to see there are too many festivals. While the fact that the tradeshow space was dotted with booths of companies catering to their needs (banner and badge makers, online services, ticketing services) some may say the business has arrived. In reality, it’s arrived at a turning point. Attendance needs to triple at the next event – only 200 registrants out of thousands of fests.
But it also needs to offer something to the big fests rather than a free ticket and bed. (And to set up shop in Henderson, NV? Forty minutes and a 60 buck cab-ride from the Strip? A town whose motto should be: “What happens in Henderson, happens in your grandma’s retirement community.”)
Rarely is there an event with potential to bring the heads of the major fests together where they aren’t running to the next theater; where they actually have to face each other. In fact, the more interesting conversations were held in caucus-like dinner and reception drink huddles. Who scalped which film from whom. The battle for Sundance-rejected premiere left-overs. Why some fests insist on premieres when others don’t. Sponsorship poaching. The big-money new fests that antagonistically stake their fest dates too close to others.
But the few big fest heads that talked to
The Circuit said they wouldn’t have come if they hadn’t been flown in.
Big fests don’t have to like each other. It shouldn’t be a peace summit. Think it group therapy, perhaps.
But there is a more important reason the big fests must be here:
As art houses die around the country, festivals are filling the gap by becoming exhibitors (and sometimes being charged like one by distribs). As Telluride’s Gary Meyer put it, the responsibility is changing.
While the big fests may roll their eyes at the little guys, they must accept a deeper responsibility to the art form. Art needs to get out there. Even to Abilene, TX. (Especially to Abilene, TX. ) There is need to weed out the vanity fests, but there is a bigger need to pump up and mentor the ones spreading the good word.
While IFFS is not there yet, it could be. Next year will be telling. Let's hope it arrives. It still has a veneer of something put together by a tradeshow company. And it is. Their other shows are on the healthcare industry, for example. They have an advisory board of fest directors. But those people need to be much, much more involved.