Email
 
 

QUICK LINKS:

IF Magazine
IF Awards
Production Book
IF FX Quarterly

 

HotWare
 

Want up to a year's free training for Autodesk's 3ds Max, Maya and others

For a limited time, Digistor is including Digital Tutors online training with every commercial 3ds Max or Maya purchased* giving you and your team access to the world's largest online CG training library for free. more...

 

Crossgrade to EDIUS 6 for $449 and experience real realtime editing

Grass Valley and Corsair Solutions are proud to announce that, as part of a special competitive upgrade promotion, users of Apple's Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere, and Avid's Media Composer can now upgrade to EDIUS 6 nonlinear editing software for just... more...

 

Sony's PMW-F3. The Scalable Super35mm Solution

The PMW-F3 Super35mm digital cinematography camera from Sony truly represents a breakthrough for independent producers, filmmakers and videographers looking for maximum value in these days of ever-tightening budgets. more...

Goodies!
 

CLOSED: 4-week "Step Into Acting" course at Sydney's ACTT

Thanks for entering the competition. It has now closed. more...

 

CLOSED: Shame in-season pass AND "mirror" poster

Thanks for entering our competition. It's now closed more...

 

Competition closed: The Art of The Adventures of Tintin book

Congrats to the winners more...

Your Vote

Should cross-platform services like YouTube and Bigpond have an obligation to local content?

Yes

No

|

 

FedFest explains case of missing Spider

[Tue 24/03/2009 09:09:21]

By Brendan Swift

FedFest will revamp its entry guidelines after winning film Spider was controversially not shown at the Melbourne short film festival.

It followed a ruling by the Classification Board on March 7 that Spider could not be shown at Federation Square due to its MA+ rating and scenes that were “strong in impact”.

Three other short films that were screened at the festival on March 15 were also required to have coarse language removed: The Cook, Numurkah and How Much Do You Love Me.

The FedFest judging panel were informed of the circumstances before selecting the competition winners on March 13 and the festival audience was informed before the screening, according to director Simon Ford.

“I made the decision to keep Spider in competition as a judge’s award in the overall best film category, as Nash Edgerton, the film’s director, had already been notified as a finalist,” he said. “I adhere to my decision.”

The film has been posted on its website along with Mr Ford's full statement.

The FedFest entry guidelines, which were previously on its website between October last year and January this year, did not contain criteria regarding content, rating or classification.

Mr Ford said next year’s FedFest will require all films to be rated no higher than PG or M, contain no coarse language, and require approval by the classification board and Federation Square before being approved for entry.

He also said the judging panel (Madman Entertainment’s James Hewison and Nick Batzias, producers Jason Byrne, Beth Frey and Lizzette Atkins) effectively managed any personal conflicts of interest.

Mr Byrne did not vote on three films entered in the competition because he had produced them, Mr Ford said.

[Tue 24/03/2009 09:09:21]

2,203

 

 

 

 


 

 

Advertise

Quick Links

About us

 

Subscribe

Visit Intermedia Sites

 

© IF (IF) | Contact Us | Privacy | Copyright