Newsletter
Subscribe to our free mailing list for event announcements, CSM news and our latest reports.
Feeds
June 2006
Articles
HotDocs Launches Docs In Schools
print email discuss Agnes Varnum
A film festival is usually characterized by screenings, Q&A with filmmakers, parties and with luck, a few business deals. HotDocs, Toronto’s documentary festival and its accompanying Toronto Documentary Forum for project funding, is all of those things—and now more.
HotDocs launched a new program this year called Docs In Schools. Offering special screenings and educational materials for a select group of films, HotDocs hosted 7000 school aged kids and their teachers in free programs. Directors Nick Francis and Mark Francis screened their new film Black Gold, an exploration of the international coffee trade, to 500 students and teachers. “For the first time it became clear to us that the film could speak to different generations,” commented Nick Francis. They turned out to be an extraordinarily engaged audience. “In 1960’s young people were in engaged in the battle for civil rights and today they’re engaging in a new battle - the fight for the basic rights of millions of people whose livelihoods are being undermined by a rigged system of international trade,” said Francis.
Related Links
- Breaking New Ground: A Framework for Measuring the Social Impact of Canadian Documentaries
- Impact of Uprising of ‘34: A Coalition Model of Production and Distribution
- Media and Metanoia: Documentary “Impact” Through the Lens of Conversion
- “Documentaries: Making an Impact,” at the 25th IFP Market in New York City
- Positive: Life with HIV: When a Film Doesn’t Receive a National PBS Broadcast
- Making Your Documentary Matter 2005
- Docurama
- Reentry National Media Outreach
- Case Study: Indians, Outlaws and Angie Debo
- Using Grassroots Documentary Films for Political Change
Discussion
There are no comments on this article yet. Start the discussion below.
