Filmmaking / Directing : 8 lessons I learnt from the Cannes Film Festival by Marysia Trembecka

8 lessons I learnt from the Cannes Film Festival

I have just returned from 10 days at the Cannes Film Festival and in the midst of the red carpet premieres (I did 3 in 4 days) and the insane parties including the Hunger Games one I really learn so much. So thought I would post the main lessons here although the full detailed podcast and blog link is http://loveyourcreativity.com/2014/05/30/8-lessons-i-learnt-from-the-can... The lessons: It's a business - the fashion, the mystique, distributor, sales agent to the short filmmaker Surrounding yourself with people who dream & take big action makes you dream bigger No room for perfectionism - be like Picasso You have to do the work or someone else will grab the opportunity / from script to pre sales to press Some live to party, others live to dream. some go to work. Blagging can be an artform but it's your choice on how you want to use your energy Would you rather be at the Vanity Fair party as a success or as a ligger? Someone out there will love your work Get your elevator pitch updated It's reconnection, not desperately shoving business cards in peoples faces. Lesson 1 It’s a business, it is the business of making movies from producers, sales agents, distributor, the circus of the red carpet, the mystique of the business, the press, to how the public perceive This creative thing we do I have to understand myself as a cog in the wheel, as a brand. We have a responsibility to understand the workings of the business, the main players and how we can circumvent the gatekeepers if necessary by making our own work and where we can display it for maximum effect. You need to know the rules to break them Question for you: What area of your business do you need to know more about. Licensing? Press? The Legalities of contracts. Lesson 2 Surrounding yourself with people who dream & take big action makes you dream bigger when you are with people who don't just talk about their dreams but they make them and then they go out to the marketplace and sell their art. Plus while they are in the marketplace selling their current film or art they are already talking about collaborating for the next work. I went to Cannes as an actress but I left with knowing I will start producing films of projects. I am already working on my next solo theatre show but I now looking at making it as a short film at least. Deepak Verma, from Pukkanasha Films said to me, ‘You should be a producer’ and I went from initial horror to a short film and now I am thinking feature length! Question for you:-Who inspires you to re-size yourself, to see yourself as bigger. Lesson 3 No room for perfectionism - Picasso I had a short but valuable conversation about production with James Hacking. When he first started he made 4 or 5 shorts and then finally made his first feature and has moved forward since. He said he now knows he should have been making a short film every week and that all that fiddling round with the editing, the extra 100 hours to make 0.00001% difference is a waste of time and energy. He said that ‘Picasso had the right idea, he made 35,000 works of art in his life’ We all are prone to hanging on to the perfectionism of our art. ‘Art is never finished, only abandoned’ Da Vinci Lesson 4 You have to do the work or someone else will grab the opportunity / from script to pre sales to press Edward Rastelli-Lewis the producer I mentioned in a blog post previously ‘‘every time we miss an opportunity someone else grabs it’ What is the thing you are thinking of doing, but too scared to ? Lesson 5 Some live to party, others live to dream, some go to work. Blagging can be an artform but it's your choice on how u want to use your energy. Would you rather be at the vanity fair party as a success or as a ligger? Some people at Cannes only want to party like crazy, crawling through bushes to get to parties. Some learnt to read guest lists backwards, there is an entire blog post in there that I am choosing not to write on how to get into Cannes parties - focus is all people ;-) In the past I have wasted my energy on the party but now it is about a good blend of both! Who are you choosing to spend time with and are you focusing on your art. Lesson 6 Someone out there will love your work On the first Thursday of Cannes I had one of the funniest nights of my life with Casey Edwards and Leonardo Re, both directors. (Pictures below!) We ended up having a lovely chat with the wonderfully gregarious and funny Stephen Gaydos at the L’Oreal UniFrance party on the rooftop of the Martinez (best canapes of Cannes in my opinion) who has written and produced and is now VP of Vanity Fair. He had just come from being co-host with Cate Blanchett at the Chopard Film Awards. He told of the time he first met Quentin Tarantino who t the end of the meeting said ‘i love your film Iguana’ This is a film that Stephen Gaydos had made and he joked that he had only ever sold 5 copies of it and by the sound of it Tarantino had bought all 5 copies. Tarantino went on apparently to accurately describe some scenes he loved from the movie. It reminded me that someone somewhere will love your work and the great thing about Twitter and hashtags is that you will find your tribe, or if not you can easily build your own! Have you found and connected with your tribe yet? Do you spend time finding them? Lesson 7 Get your elevator pitch updated I did an entire blog post on this about the first Thursday I was in Cannes! Make sure you have one or two concise and inspiring sentences that says what you do other than ‘I am an actor!” which does not say that much. So when someone says to you ‘What do you do’ make your response interesting, open ended, say a little about your current project and successes’ Lesson 8 Networking is all about reconnection. It's reconnection, human being to human being, not desperately shoving business cards in people face. At Cannes you arrive at a party and people literally start firing cards at you. I chose not to do this, I chose to have actual conversations with people, although admittedly in the first week we all were talking about where the best canapes we had had were and who had served the best champagne . (The Macedonian pavilion always had gorgeous cheese and wine, the Hunger Games party won both my ‘best dessert’ and also ‘worst dessert’ award, the Scottish party ‘most random outfits’ and 'greatest networking' awards and Ken Loach’s ‘Jimmy’s Hall parties (I went to all four of the Ken Loach parties in one evening) won ‘best all round night’ and ‘nicest production people!’ awards) I bumped into so many people I had worked with, producers including one I had not seen in over a decade but she still recognized me. I also saw a director I had not seen in 14 years whose feature fulm I had done. Alex Kaufmann who now has a great online database that is free to join for all creatives in the film industry www.screenlights.com and Linked in I am not sure how many new projects I have walked away with but I am sure that there will have been a meeting with someone new or from past work that something will come fruitful of moving forward. People see you, they know you, you are not just there to get trashed n the free wine, it is about the conversation. They may not see me for another year but our careers do get built in steps. Who is worth you sending a ‘hello, not seen you in a while’ email? Further links, pics and the full audio version is here http://loveyourcreativity.com/2014/05/30/8-lessons-i-learnt-from-the-can...

Thomas C Koveleskie

Very nice lesson's Marysia.

Marysia Trembecka

Thanks Thomas! It has taken me a while to get so focused on my acting career but amazing when you do how the work does come ;-)

Lisa Rost-Welling

Top lessons to think about. Thanks for being willing to share.

Marysia Trembecka

;-) We all in this together Lisa as creatives, as voices, as actors, we get to change the world a moment at a time.. ;-)

Geof Spalding

Thanks for the great article

Marysia Trembecka

Thanks for your great experience and knowledge Alle ;-) I have produced in the past my own theatre , cabaret and music shows some of which have toured abroad, just never film. I have a background in banking, finance and business but am 100& focused on my creative career Will respond at length later - just dashing off to rehearsal as am singing live on the radio 2mrw to promote a collaborative show I have produced that is in a Covent Garden theatre Sunday .. as you say you need to constant hustle, do your work, get together with experts in their own field etc ....

Harrison R. Cornell

"he made 35,000 works of art in his life" and they still didn't notice him while he was living. Your writing has good points to ponder. Thank you. ~ Harrison

Erwin Vanderhoydonks

It's a matter of knowing the people how knows other people..and they know...and they know... and perhaps they will find you if they remember you for what they remember you did. It's a small world out there...

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