• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Fusion Film Festival

Celebrating women in TV, Film & New Media

  • Homepage
  • About
  • Archive
  • Press & Media
  • Submit
  • Blog
  • Support Us
  • Contact

alum

Mar 06 2014

What Filmmakers Can Learn from the Docs-In-The-Works Pitch Competition: Tips & Insight From Prof. Nilita Vachani

The Docs-In-The-Works competition at Fusion is a yearly institution, but also perhaps our most misunderstood event to audiences – that is, until they witness it for themselves. The pitch competition is unlike any other, it’s an immersive experience that is both educational and professional, beyond what a classroom can offer. The woman behind this event, award-winning documentarian of the Grand Prize at the Festival dei Popoli and current Tisch professor Nilita Vachani, describes it as a “doorway into the real world [of filmmaking].”

Five finalists have already been chosen whose in progress documentaries show great promise in how they construct a powerful story through the documentary medium. All of them are in the running to win some very practical awards in completing their projects – including, Final Draft 9, Gotham Sound, VideoBlocks Subscription, and a WMM’s Workshop Pass. This Friday they will each have 10 minutes to pitch their documentaries and screen their trailers and 10 minutes to field a Q&A from a panel of esteemed executives from at HBO, Independent Film Project, History Channel, Impact Partners, POV, and Chicken & Egg Pictures.

Yet, as Nilita describes the event, it is “not just people sitting in chairs and talking. It’s a rapid fire Q&A that delves into story, characterization, narration, potential audiences, and much more.” The session can be just as exciting for the audience as the work shown; Nilita notes that “the panel often disagrees with each other, which makes it more interesting” given that all of the story conventions discussed do ultimately “depend on taste.”

Still, there are things the competitors can do in preparation to elevate their project to a level of refined, while still raw, taste before the pitch. Nilita coaches all of the finalists for weeks before the competition and offers some great tips, which she was more than happy to share with me so that audience members have the opportunity to learn as much as the competitors.

Nilita claims that often times in order to “bring out the strengths and address the weaknesses” of the project” often times “a re-edit of the trailer is required.”

The trailer shouldn’t look so slick. It needs to give a real sense of the world and still feel rough and raw. This is a film that’s crying to be made. One incredible shot will leave the audience and panelists wanting to see this story more than an over-produced edit.

 
In regards to pitching it is also important to bear in mind the time limit; in fact, the 20 minute pitch within the competition is another quality that grounds it in the real-world of both narrative and documentary production. “You only get 10 minutes to pitch and 10 minutes to field Q&A so to maximize the exposure, what you say verbally should not be a repetition of what’s in the trailer, they should be different yet work hand in glove,” Nilita explains.

Audience members find themselves completely engaged in Docs-In-The-Works year after year, more so as participants than simply as flies-on-the-wall of a high-profile pitch session. This year though the array of finalists alone are enough of a draw for a diverse experience in documentary work. Four out of five of the finalists follow the true life narratives of immigration stories, though they are all handled in extremely different ways. Two of the films are on Asian immigrant experience, “both dramatically different from each other and both shatter stereotypes.” One even implements an immigration story with sections told through animation while stilling holding true to the heart of documentary storytelling.

The most thrilling aspect of being an audience member at Docs-In-The-Works is to witness and take part in the shaping of true works-in-progress of true stories. “These films will have a life outside of film school,” Nilita says, “as will all of us as students.” Nilita’s words hold true for Emma Thatcher, a finalist from last year’s Docs-In-The-Works who went on to complete her project as her first feature To The Moon, and Fusion winner in Undergrad Narrative Film from last year, Erin Sanger, who credits being an audience member at Docs as her inspiration for directing a her own documentary on a wounded EOD war veteran post-graduation (For more on these two wonderful Fusion filmmakers and their projects check out our blog posts on them: Emma Thatcher and Erin Sanger). Come join us this Friday at 3PM in Tisch 006 to be a part of a Fusion tradition and truly professional experience in the world of documentary pitches, which at its core is really just testing the ability to tell a worthwhile story.

By Danielle Massie

Written by Rachel Thaw · Categorized: Articles, Events · Tagged: alum, docs-in-the-works, documentary pitch, Emma Thatcher, erin sanger, fusion film festival, Nilita Vachani

Jan 24 2014

Fusion Alums Lauren Ciaravalli and Misha Green Attend Sundance Institute’s Women In Film Finance Forum

On November 12th, 2013 the Sundance Institute held a one-day finance forum in Los Angeles with their allied partners of the Women in Films Initiative to give accomplished female writers, directors, and producers an overview of current film financing models. Through extensive panels on what investors search for in today’s market, case-studies on film financing successes, and training on how to garner confidence while raising money for a film, Sundance and WIF sought to challenge what they uncovered in their startling 2012 case study. The study, authored by Dr. Stacy L. Smith, analyzed over 30,000 data points over 11 years and concluded that independent narrative films rely almost entirely on a male-operated structure, female-helmed projects are perceived to lack commercial viability, and women are often viewed as lacking conviction when requesting film financing. The forum set out whole-heartedly to challenge these findings and the reflections and speeches given at the event by Ciaravalli and Green show the great strides female filmmakers are making in producing their own films and festivals at an early level.

Misha Green directed three well-received short films during her time at NYU Tisch and won the Fusion Film Festival competition for her short screenplay In Between Days. Misha went on the produce In Between Days as a digital short for Nylon Magazine, sign with CAA, and write and produce for multiple hit television series, including “Sons of Anarchy” and “Heroes.” Misha is currently working on adapting Colleen Curran’s “Whores on the Hill” as her directorial debut.

Lauren Ciaravalli graduated from Tisch just last year and was one of the co-directors of the Fusion Film Festival as well as a winner for her Sight & Sound film, Mrs. Sheridan, her short screenplay, Tryouts, and her TV pilot script, The Hilltop. She recently created and sold the dramedy web-series Max + Max for PetParents TV and completed her second short film, Dream Date.  Lauren now lives in Los Angeles as she begins her career in scripted television as an assistant at William Morris Endeavor Entertainment.

As a strong leader and participant in the festival, Lauren presented the mission and methods of Fusion to celebrate both the accomplishments of women in the film industry and foster collaboration of the sexes before the forum. Lauren thanked many of the female industry mavens in the room, particularly those from our mentors at the Nantucket Film Festival for supporting the growth of Fusion in our efforts to honor everything the Women in Films Initiative stands for.

By Danielle Massie

Written by Rachel Thaw · Categorized: Articles, News & Updates · Tagged: alum, Lauren Ciaravalli, Misha Green, Sundance Institute, Tisch School of the Arts, Women in Films Initiative

Footer

Sign up for our newsletter

Follow us

  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Latest from the blog

  • Fusion Film Festival Begins Soon!March 29, 2023
  • Rebecca Hall’s Passing and the Fallacy of Black & WhiteMarch 29, 2023
  • Solving the Case of Velma’s Struggling HBO Show: A Whodunit of Ratings and CriticismMarch 29, 2023

@FusionFilmFest

  • 2009 Awards CeremonyMay 6, 2022
  • 2007 Launch EventMay 6, 2022
  • 2006 Launch EventOctober 13, 2021

Fusion Film Festival. All rights reserved