Blog

We always have something new in the works. Here's what you need to know.

Recent Posts

  1. The ITVS Indie Roundup

    September 28, 2012

    A curated list of indie news and recommendations from ITVS’s Rebecca Huval. Has the film industry given up on liberal arts? At least two recent movies suggest that might be the case. The 50th New York Film Festival opens up today at the Lincoln Center, and will hopefully calm our fears about the death of cinema. West Coasters yearning for a film festival

  2. The ITVS Indies Roundup

    July 27, 2012

    A curated list of indie news and recommendations from ITVS’s Rebecca Huval. Hey, internet dunces: You, too, could create a multimedia package for your film! Knight News Challenge winner the Tiziano Project pulls from existing technology on the web to help storytellers with amateur web skills polish their online videos. "Get comfortable with the idea

  3. The ITVS Indies Roundup

    July 13, 2012

    A curated list of indie news and recommendations from ITVS’s Rebecca Huval. They say to never judge a book by its cover, nor a movie by its book, but here’s an excuse to do both: The Atlantic compiled iconic book covers next to their movie posters, such as The Great Gatsby. Prepare to drool over the design. “I can haz film fest?” The first-ever Internet Video Cat

  4. The ITVS Indies Roundup

    June 22, 2012

    A curated list of indie news and recommendations from ITVS’s Rebecca Huval. Who said there’s no money in documentary filmmaking? You could score $100,000 for producing a three-minute nonfiction film about invention or innovation in the Focus Forward Filmmaker Challenge. The deadline for submissions is August 23. While we’re on the subject of money,

  5. The ITVS Indies Roundup

    May 18, 2012

    A curated list of indie news and recommendations from ITVS’s Rebecca Huval. Are you obsessed with GIFs yet? If you’re not, now’s the time to start. PBS Off Book produced an excellent primer into the art of the moving still image, known as the Graphic Interchange Format, from its uncool, corporate beginnings in the 1990s to its current heyday. Here’s a