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Northern Colorado Film Community Selects New Logo

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C/O Seth Haller Filmmakers based in Northern Colorado will have a new way to express their hometown pride after the unveiling of a new logo representing the state.  Selected from a field of nine designs, voters in the film community overwhelmingly chose Seth Haller’s design depicting the state of Colorado as a film slate.  Haller’s appreciation for the film community enabled him to express his creativity through his practice as a graphic designer. “If we haven’t met yet, I am a local designer who would love to contribute to this filmmaker community by making graphics for props, titles, credits, posters, and whatever needs special design attention,” Haller said. “Like Saul Bass, I want to ‘make beautiful things even if nobody cares.’” Local film influencer Jesse Nyander spurred on the logo contest at the end of 2023, with the goal of creating a united front for local filmmakers to push forward their own interests. In the past, he has said wide adoption of a locally-made logo will encour

Blast N Scrap launches new film program

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B42s organizer Jamal Page poses with posters planning the group's future. Fort Collins-based Blast N Scrap has launched a new program focused on film production. Local filmmaker Jamal Page is working with the indie music incubator to educate local artists on filmmaking and videography. The project will focus on giving back to Northern Colorado’s arts community while allowing newcomers to gain experience working in film and videography. Page, who founded and serves as creative director of Black Sparrow Media LLC, wants people to learn while working with the B42s. “We want the main takeaway from everything we do to be an education purpose,” Page said at the B42s launch event December 19. Page initially got the idea for what would become the B42s while putting together the Summer of Shorts in early 2020. When the pandemic forced him to change up his initial plans, Page was able to direct his energies into working with Blast N Scrap. Plans for the B42s include producing advertisements

Who keeps the gate?

Film is the type of industry that is so easy to break into, and yet so hard.  A common refrain is the idea that anyone with a smartphone can make a movie. To an extent, this is true. "Tangerine" was shot entirely using iPhones. It was also director Sean Baker's fifth feature-length film. What separates "insider" and "outsider" art is rarely the cost of materials. Instead, it has more to do with experience and knowledge. The most expensive cameras on the market won't save you from bad shot composition. Thousand-dollar lighting setups still need to be placed carefully. Throwing money at Adobe Inc. is not an effective use of Premiere Pro or After Effects. So who keeps the gate? Do we privilege those who went to film school, who took the time and maybe even the loans to get more comfortable with their skills as artists? What about those with on-set experience, which up until recently has been hard to come by in Northern Colorado? Filmmaking isn't j

Making Films Fast

We are entering the season of the 48-hour film festival! There's just something about summer that spurs people into going out and actually making stuff.  I'm one of the crazy people who can't work without crazy constraints. If you don't give me a tight deadline and a word count to reach, the project is just going to sit rotting in my drafts, forever. From the proliferation of 48-hour film festivals, I can assume that others feel the same way. During undergrad, I actually tried to organize my own 48-hour film festival with my university's film club. I advertised it as a "film jam," thinking more people would be familiar with games jams and hackathons. Bad move, because the target audience was students at a famously liberal arts-focused college. The results can be found on YouTube here ( 1 ) ( 2 ). One pitfall? It can be hard to round up a group of friends willing to commit to 48 whole hours focused just on filmmaking. One solution that did work out was recr

A Silly Little Soft-Launch

Northern Colorado's film scene keeps growing. Talented people keep moving here, while the region's vocational programs and four-year colleges regularly turn out skilled young people. How can everyone interested in film stay informed and up-to-date? Social media is a landscape of walled gardens. The Facebook groups and Instagram pages can catch some people, while others congregate on Meetups and LinkedIn, while still more seek out creators on YouTube and Vimeo. In order to see what each individual group has to say, you could need to make upwards of five accounts, and be ready to promote your professional self across all of them. Blogs don't necessarily have those same restrictions. You don't need to make an account to view our calendar. You can search us up on your favorite engine, or subscribe with your email address, or pull us into an RSS reader. This blog is, first and foremost, a resource. You can get the details on in-person events where you could watch your new fa