daily tiger
42nd International Film Festival Rotterdam #10 Saturday 2 February 2013 ZOZ voor Nederlandse editie
(news P3)
(Memories of Fire / Misericordia / The New World P5)
(Nearly) all the Tiger nominees 2013. Back row: Eduardo Villanueva (Penumbra); Pelin Esmer ( Watchtower); Guido van Driel ( The Resurrection of a Bastard); Yang Lina (Longing for the Rain); Marcelo Lordello ( They’ll Come Back). Middle row: Giovanni Columbu (Su Re); Daniel Hoesl (Soldier Jane); Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit (36);Matt Hulse (Dummy Jim).
(NANOUK LEOPOLD P7)
Front row: Mohammad Shirvani (Fat Shaker); Leonardo Brzezicki (Noche); Mira Fornay (My Dog Killer); Sebastián Hofmann (Halley); Visra Vichit Vadakan (Karaoke Girl); Eliza Hittman (It Felt Like Love). Not present: Ricky Rijneke (Silent Ones). photo: Bram Belloni
Test ground Despite tough times, IFFR will continue to provide audiences with a space to be adventurous, says festival boss Rutger Wolfson. By Geoffrey Macnab
Friday morning in the IFFR offices, festival director Rutger Wolfson is contemplating the 42nd festival over a cup of tea. Asked to pinpoint his 2013 highlights, Wolfson apologizes for giving the same answer that he does every year - it’s presenting the work. “You’re an Iranian filmmaker. Your film is from inside your own country. Only a handful of people have seen it in Tehran and you take it to Rotterdam. There’s a sold-out audience in a very beautiful theatre. It’s a really special moment for them, for the audience and for us as well!” In 2012, ticket sales at IFFR fell quite sharply. The total number of audience visits was 274,000, down from 340,000 in 2011. Wolfson and his team have taken some very practical measures to address the slide in what is still one of the biggest public film festivals in the world. Although Wolfson doesn’t yet have precise figures for this year, he is “quite optimistic” that the figures will be steady and perhaps even up. “That’s a big relief because we have been working very hard to make it easier for audience to come to the festival.” IFFR has introduced last-minute tickets, online offers and discount passes. Wolfson and his programmers acknowledge that these are tough times financially but are determined to give festival audiences “the space to be adventurous”. Distribution
Meanwhile, IFFR is further ramping up its distribution activities through its new partnership with Under The Milky Way (which has set up an IFFR room on iTunes for Benelux viewers). “It’s a very logical step. We support filmmakers at every stage but distribution is clearly one of the most difficult things”, Wolfson reflects.
Alongside this, the Festival will continue to work with its other regular partners. “The wisdom nowadays is that you should go for all platforms. No-one is talking about exclusivity. For us, it is a test ground to see what works.” This year, the festival has introduced the Big Screen Award to support distribution of films in Dutch cinemas. However, the festival boss laments the fact that EYE, the Dutch centre for film culture and heritage, is no longer allowed to pick up films for distribution in the Netherlands. “The Big Screen Award can’t fill that gap, but I am happy at least we can do something.” Hubert Bals Fund
Wolfson acknowledges that there are questions about long-term finance for the Hubert Bals Fund, whose government funding will dry up after next year’s edition. However, the IFFR boss gives a 100% commitment that HBF (which supports filmmakers from developing countries) will remain a core part of IFFR’s identity. “It is clear for us that the combination of festival, market and Fund will work really well,” Wolfson suggests. “They [filmmakers supported by HBF] make the festival stronger, which in turn allows the festival to be a better partner for filmmakers.” Wolfson says that IFFR “still hasn’t found the magical solution that makes all the financial problems with the Hubert Bals Fund go away.” Nonetheless, he is confident that HBF will continue. Celebrity visits
Last weekend, Dutch culture minister Jet Bussemaker came to town. During her trip, IFFR was effectively acting as matchmaker, bringing her together with key Dutch industry figures in advance of the government ‘summit’ on the Dutch film industry in March. “There’s a broad consensus in the Dutch industry about what needs to be done”, Wolfson suggests of plans to set up some form of tax incentive or shelter to stimulate film-
making in the Netherlands – and to stop the country losing so much work to neighbouring Belgium. He is delighted by the press attention for Bernardo Bertolucci. “But we’re not the kind of festival that gives lifetime achievement awards to someone who hasn’t made a film in five years just to get all this press. He has made a very nice new film that we like very much.”
Tiger winners
Art:Film
This year has seen the launch of Rotterdam’s new Art:Film initiative in collaboration with Danish documentary festival CPH:DOX. Wolfson says the initiative will continue. “What the festival can offer is access to the film industry … if artists want to make a feature film project, please come to CineMart. But if you want to make an installation to sell to collectors, that’s not our forte”, Wolfson says. For Art:Film is to work, Wolfson argues, it needs to be “practical, practical, practical, practical,” not another talking shop. “In the end, it’s an industry. You need to show results. These projects need to be financed and to be distributed. They need to build a track record. That’s what it is all about.” We’ll meet again
The festival boss hasn’t had time to think about who will replace CineMart coordinator Jacobine van der Vloed, who is leaving the festival after a decade’s sterling service. “We’re very sorry to see Jacobine go. She has been a very hard driving force”, Wolfson says. “We have a very good team. I am sure we can figure out how to do it.” In April, Wolfson will be heading to the Caribbean for the second Curaçao IFFR. The first edition went well and Wolfson believes the sister event will continue to grow. The festival director’s own contract runs until 2014. It’s not the time, though, to ask if he will continue. “We’ll see”, Wolfson states. In the meantime, it’s time “to get reacquainted with my kids!”
INTERNATIONAL film festival rotterdam
My Dog Killer
Soldier Jane
Fat Shaker