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Maggie Shiels

Please leave your phone on in the cinema

  • Maggie Shiels
  • 24 Jun 09, 08:31 GMT

The San Francisco Jewish Film Festival () is taking a leap into the digital age.

Screengrab of SFJFF websiteThe organisers hope to act as a kind of one-stop shop for anyone interested in Jewish films and film-makers (see and ), billing it the of Jewish film.

The festival's executive director Peter Stein told me:

"What we are trying to do is bring some of the essential aspects of what a film festival does in four walls to the online world. We are talking about offering not just great content, but also context and meaning and a sense of community, and migrating all of that to the online space."

This means, of course, podcasts, streaming media, educational materials and social networking opportunities - but the tool that the organisers really want to encourage people to use is the ubiquitous mobile phone. They want anyone who comes to the physical festival to keep their phone on in the theatre. Yep, I said "on".

Rather than sitting back and munching on the popcorn, the festival hopes that audience members will give instant feedback - and use to interview film-makers who can't be there in person.

"We want to create relationships between films and the audience over time. Relationships between people who are not in the same place at the same time," explained Mr Stein.

The project is being backed by a number of foundations, including that set up by film director , the , and hopes to provide "a living archive and educational tool for Jewish history and film for future generations".

The SFJFF sees this as part of a broader trend of film festivals, film-making and educational content moving online and stakes a claim that "we are one of the first culturally-specific film festival organisations and the first Jewish organisation to do this".

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Smart idea! It's good to encourage stuff like this, it's beneficial to the film industry in many ways too!

  • Comment number 2.

    As innovative as this sounds, I'm not so sure it'd be beneficial to anyone. Think about it: you're momentarily distracted whilst sending a tweet about how good-looking the actor is, and by the time you've redirected your attention to the screen you've missed an important piece of dialogue or a twist in the plot!
    Also, as phones [Unsuitable/Broken URL removed by Moderator] get more and more sophisticated there's an increased risk of piracy; not only would nobody notice if you are filming, but you're encouraged to take out your recording equipment in the first place!
    It's a step up from filming audience reaction (as so many horror film-makers are keen on doing for marketing purposes; anyone else wonder if the audiences are picked because they scare so easily?) but as an avid film-goer myself I believe in the Five-Minute Rule: don't say a word about the film you've just seen until you've given it time to sink in; such knee-jerk reactions to films as this would kill any sense of buzz that word-of-mouth could otherwise generate.

  • Comment number 3.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

 

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