Film festival comes into focus
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The 2005 Newport Beach Film Festival is coming into focus. Festival
Executive Director Gregg Schwenk and the festival’s staff are moving
into an intense time these days. They are preparing for 300-plus
films and various film-related events to be shown and organized at
theaters and other venues around town April 21 through 30.
More volunteers are needed, and a film entry deadline has been
extended into early February. By April, a year-round core staff of 22
volunteers will balloon to more than 200. Plus, 2005 is a year of new
goals and some firsts for the now 6-year-old festival, which brings
classic and contemporary film to Newport Beach.
During the day, Schwenk -- a Newport Beach resident and a founding
member of the festival -- is senior vice president for RSM EquiCo in
Costa Mesa, where a knowledge of the mergers-and-acquisitions
marketplace is essential to leading a research-and-analysis team for
the firm. The firm helps owners of companies maximize their firms’
value before being acquired by new owners. But in his spare time, a
keen interest in film -- along with his business acumen -- has helped
him and his staff develop the festival.
Schwenk talked to the Pilot’s Ryan Carter.
What are your goals for the festival this year?
We believe that we’re going to be building on what has been a
strong foundation of success over the last five years, and that our
sixth year is going to reflect those strengths. We plan to integrate
different facets of the community into all portions of the festival.
We plan to expand the into areas our audience wished us to. We really
don’t think we’re going to be doing anything revolutionary, but we
think we’ll be very evolutionary in the growth for 2006.
How has the festival changed in these six years of existence?
I think we’ve become more professional. I think we’ve been able to
develop certain facets of our staff and certain components in ways
that are beneficial not only to our local community, but the arts
community overall. These things vary from an extremely successful
seminar program to integration of the universities in the local area.
Now, in 2005, we’ll have our first youth division at the Newport
Beach Film Festival, where we give future filmmakers a chance to
screen their works to a mass audience. These are filmmakers under the
age of 18.
I’d say that when we started the festival, it was two computers
and a copy machine, and now it is scores of computers and multiple
copy machines and a very passionate, motivated staff of people who
want to bring to our community the very best in classic, contemporary
filmmaking. What’s nice about this is that through the experience of
the festival, many of the filmmakers and those who have participated
at some level have come back to work with the festival. An example of
this is Lance Winkel, our director of shorts programming, who in the
second year of our festival actually one best animated short. He was
so impressed with what he saw, he is now directing the shorts
program.
You are seeing people who possibly were involved in the film
industry and are now working for us, finding films, scouting them at
major festivals around the world, members of the community who have
said, “We want to pledge our business support for the festival.”
Major corporations are now seeing the festival as a way to outreach
to the community. We’re excited about the progress we’ve made.
You’ve talked about the festival’s connections. Talk a little more
about them -- how recently they’ve been made and why they are
important?
From the very beginning, the city of Newport Beach and the City
Council, along with Lucy and Leigh Steinberg of Newport Beach, have
been steadfast founding sponsors of the festival.
You’ve got other organizations, like Adelphia, Absolut Vodka,
American Express, First Republic Bank. All of these institutions and
companies have been there for quite some time as sponsors and
supporters of the festival. And then, you’ve got a few new ones, like
the Pacific Life Foundation, that have come on board this year.
We feel our outreach in sponsorship development, which will be
pretty much concluded over the next month, will allow us to do some
things we’ve never had the chance to do before.
Like what?
I mentioned the youth program. We’re going to be having a special
focus on the importance of the written word in film, with a focus on
the art of screenwriting. We’ll have an entire day dedicated to
screenwriters. And we’re working with UCI and with the Newport Beach
Public Library to host that seminar. It expands what was usually a
one-panel discussion to an entire day of screenwriters. We’ll
continue with a rich tradition of making the arts festival
accessible. That is one of the big goals that we have -- that the
arts are not something removed from our community or culture. We feel
we can live up to that expectation through the festival.
We are also taking an experience, which for most people is a
commodity. We want to make going to see a movie a unique experience.
The films that are screened at the festival, this might be the only
time they are seen in Orange County and quite possibly the only time
they are seen in Southern California. And so, for those people who
want to have a fun and unique experience, that’s what these 10 days
offer -- the ability to see amazing works of art that are extremely
accessible, which you might not see anywhere else.
What kind of films will be shown this year?
We will probably, by the time the screening is finished, have
screened between 1,000 to 1,200 films to find the more than 300 films
we’ll screen at the festival. We are confident we’ll have a strong
showing of Sundance films that will be making their West Coast
premiere at the festival. We’ll have a number of films from the Pusan
Film Festival, one of the largest film festivals in Asia. We have a
few people scouting early films in Berlin. We’re working with some of
the consulates and film agencies of different countries to bring in
some outstanding foreign-language films. That would include not only
many of the films submitted for foreign Oscars but films that have
done exceptionally in their native countries and are trying to make a
run of it here in the United States.
Last year was a huge spike in film entries for us, and we’re
really riding on that success. Newport has gained a great deal of
industry buzz as far as a festival that is very filmmaker friendly,
that is a wonderful location to spend your time, and its proximity to
Hollywood is also a great place to bring distributors.
Are there challenges that this area presents in putting on a
festival?
The challenges of this area are its strengths. When a filmmaker
comes here, it’s very expensive for them to stay at a hotel; it’s
very expensive for them to eat out. But those are things they’d have
to do no matter where they were.
That’s filmmakers. What about your audience? Are there pros and
cons about the demographics of this area?
There was a report that came out a few years back that Orange
County was one of the largest per capita movie-going audiences in the
United States. The audience at our festival is a very strong
reflection of that. It is a very well-educated, very demanding
audience. It’s one that will accept different ideas and perspectives
as long as it’s a well-crafted and well-made film.
How many of your film entries are from local artists?
It really varies from year to year. Of the 300 films that we have
in the festival, with our partnerships that we’ve forged, especially
with the film schools locally, you will have a focus, or spotlight on
OCC filmmakers, or Chapman filmmakers, or Cal State Fullerton
filmmakers, or Long Beach. You have a number of people who you live
and work next to who have a film in our festival. We’re also proud of
the diversity at the festival ....
Is the festival as accessible as you’d like it to be? Are you
attracting the audiences you want?
Accessibility is so important. Often, people will approach me and
say: “Oh, well I thought the festival was for people only in the
industry.” It’s for people in the community. This is for everyone.
You might not like everything you see, but out of 300 films, there’s
probably something you are really going to enjoy.
How’d you get involved with the festival?
There was an old festival in Newport Beach that didn’t do so well
financially. I had been working on the [Newport Beach] Economic
Development Committee for a number of years and still serve on that.
I worked my way through school during research work and happened to
do a great deal of work on the film industry. Those all sort of fused
together, and I felt the idea of a film festival in Newport Beach was
very sound as long as the right business structure was in place. And
that was about 5 1/2 years ago, and I’ve been doing it ever since.
Anything else you wanted to add?
I think another important thing for the festival is, we have the
ability to bring unique film opportunities year-round. For example,
we are a partner with Regal Cinemas on their Flashback Features.
We’ve partnered with the UCI Extension program for their Sneak
Preview program. For a number of weeks in the fall, we were able to
work with them to bring pre-release films to UCI to screen the film
and do a Q&A; afterward. We’ll be very, very busy throughout the year
and have opportunities for people who enjoy the 10 days of the
festival to continue that enjoyment throughout the year.
* For more information, go to https://newportbeachfilmfest.com.
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