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The Screengrab

Who Cries For The Film Nerds?

Posted by Leonard Pierce

The economic crisis has been hard for everybody.  Some of us have lost their homes; others have lost their savings or their retirement money.  John McCain has probably lost the presidency.  But, as usual, it's the film geeks who suffer the most, as word comes from Wyoming that the Jackson Hole Film Festival is no more.

We know what you're saying:  "I didn't even know that there was a Jackson Hole Film Festival".  Possibly you were also saying "I didn't know that there was such a place as Jackson Hole, Wyoming."  A few of you were probably saying "Which one is Wyoming again?  Is that the one that's totally square, or is that Utah?"  I also think I heard a "Seriously?  Jackson Hole?  There's a place called Jackson Hole and they expected people to go see movies in it?"  Okay, okay, settle down.  That's enough jokes.  The fact is, with the economy bad and getting worse, film festivals -- which once were sprouting like mushrooms -- are likely to become increasingly scarce, and that's not a good thing for movies in generally, and for independent film in particular.

Then again, Hollywood's so-called "Golden Age" began in the 1930s, when America was in the midst of the Great Depression.  At a time of deep deprivation and misery, people wanted escape and entertainment more than ever, and the motion picture business thrived.  So, what do you think, Screengrab readers?  Will the economic collapse we're facing be the beginning of the end for cinema, or will it herald a new Golden Age?

Related Posts:

The Tribeca Film Festival Tightens Up

The 15th (and Final) New York Underground Film Festival


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Comments

Sara said:

A new Golden Age of TV maybe. Movies (as has been heard many times before) have two things going against them - !. the high cost of going to movie theaters and 2. Television.

That being said, I'm not calling it the death of cinema either though, ironman-like cinematic escape outside the home will still probably appeal even at that high cost (though probably not as much as it has recently), but indie movie making will be hurting more than it already is, that's for sure.

October 17, 2008 1:18 AM

About Leonard Pierce

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