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The Screengrab

  • Rep Report Supplement: The New York International Children's Film Festival

    Tomorrow marks the opening of the tenth annual New York International Children's Film Festival, which runs through March 16 and spreads its bounty across four venues: IFC Center, the Directors Guild of America (DGA) theater, Symphony Space, and the Cantor Film Center. The festival was launched a decade ago by Eric Beckman and Emily Shapiro, who immediately discovered that they faced an uphill battle from those who associate the term "children's film" with "inoffensive pap." It's a measure of just how ingrained that idea has become that the festival founders had to address it even in their discussions with filmmakers who were reluctant to have their films shown, lest they become tainted with the dread "family friendly" label. As Beckman told S. James Snyder in an interview for the New York Sun, "Over and over, I found myself talking to filmmakers who reacted along the lines of 'I'm not sure this is a movie for children.' And I just started to become this broken record: 'Don't judge it through the lens of whether this will be nice for children. If it's a great film, then it's a great film for all age groups.'"

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  • Wild Style in the Internet Age



    S. James Snyder reports on recent developments in graffiti, which has begun to merge its own subculture with that of the Internet. In the long-gone, heady days of the late seventies and eighties, when graffiti had intricate connections to hip hop and other emerging forms of urban youth culture, taggers were seen as dashing underground figures with spray cans, risking life and liberty to create eye-catching designs and placing them on the sides of buildings and subway trains designed to get maximum exposure in the places that counted. "Today," writes Snyder, "in an age dominated by technology and people who spend more time in the virtual world than the real world, graffiti artists must do a whole lot more than spray. For starters, there's the technological know-how of getting your work not just online, but into the social networks and channels populated by fans of the art form. Then there's the aesthetic quandary of how to translate one's work to the Internet. Should it exist as a photo album? A slide show? A graphic? A video?" The New York-based Graffiti Research Lab (G.R.L.) is on the case.

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  • Selling the "Cloverfield" Monster



    In anticipation of the arrival on Friday of Cloverfield, S. James Snyder reviews the marketing of the movie, which started last summer with a trailer strategically attached to the release of Transformers. (If you're going to try to coax people out to see a new movie in the misbegotten month of January, you can't start too early.)

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