Microcinema

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Microcinema has two meanings. it can describe low-budget films shot mostly on digital video, edited on a computer, and then distributed via videotape, disc or over the Internet. Or it can describe a mode of low-budget exhibition—a small theater or screening series operated in order to show small-gauge filmmaking, artists works, shorts, and reperatory programming.

The term "microcinema" was coined in 1991 by San Francisco's Total Mobile Home Microcinema, where all the films are "underground" because they're shown in the basement. The founders say they envisioned an alternative movement, a sort of cinematic microbrewery. And now, the word has come to describe an intimate, low-budget style of movie shot on relatively cheap formats like Hi-8 video, DV, and (less often) older do-it-yourself stock like 16mm film.

Microcinema is a flexible term that can cover anything - animated shorts, bizarrely impressionistic video manipulations, hard-hitting documentaries, and garage-born feature-length movies. A classic microcinema offering is a film that probably would not exist if new technology hadn't allowed its creators to cut costs or inspired them to try something different.

[edit] Characteristics

• Low budget considering your locations and intent of distribution
• Tends to be shot on a video camera or 16mm camera
• Small crew (under 20 but usually around 5-10 people)
• Director tends to be the writer, producer, director of photography and editor
• Limited equipment owned by the director/crew or rented
• Initial distribution of film done by filmmaker
• Films premier at film festivals or on the internet
• Actors are usually unknown in pop culture and work for free
• Directors are usually unknown in pop culture


[edit] External links