2010 in review

2 01 2011

Thank You!

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Fresher than ever.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 2,300 times in 2010. That’s about 6 full 747s.

In 2010, there were 8 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 76 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 12mb. That’s about 1 pictures per week.

The busiest day of the year was July 1st with 118 views. The most popular post that day was Call for Shorts – KFF 2010.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were italiannights.co.uk, festivalfocus.org, italiannights.org, 242movietv.com, and mail.live.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for kaleidoshorts, ai-15 gun, kyoto, kff 2010, and kaleidoshort film festival.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Call for Shorts – KFF 2010 April 2010
7 comments

2

About KaleidoShorts April 2010

3

About Italian Nights April 2010
2 comments

4

KFF V, London 2010 June 2010

5

Short Movies, short history part 1… April 2010





KFF V, London 2010

5 06 2010

Dear Friends, follow the information published in “Call For Shorts – KFF 2010″ to submit your works of Art. This year the deadline is set for the 15th of July 2010. The Festival final night and public screening will be held at the beginning of August in central London.





KaleidoNets

3 06 2010

Whole Equation – A phrase borrowed from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s unfinished Hollywood novel, The Last Tycoon, refers to the balancing of financial acumen, artistic aspiration and sociological savvy that movie moguls needed to keep Hollywood flourishing during the Depression.





DocuShorts soon to join the family!

8 05 2010

Italian Nights will soon start working on this new exciting project. It will bring to London and its passionate public an event organised around the art of making inspiring documentaries and engaging story telling. Whichever the narrative directions chosen following the classic Hollywood storytelling (Linear) or, focusing on information, facts and logic (Discursive), connecting situations and casual relations (Episodic) or, using poetic associations (Poetic) to tell the story on video, these will be short work of art for you to enjoy and appreciate.





Short Movies, short history part 3…

25 04 2010

There are several cinematography expressions that get overlooked and not celebrated. Shorts sometime unfairly suffer from this “rapid look” and erratic type of attention. This is partly due to the way shorts are often used, more like a training camp before going to make full feature films. However, short films are still a powerful form of art extremely relevant and artistically sound because of the unique combination of strong narrative and the need of synthesis. Short movies cover an important role and cultural function for aspiring cine-entusiasts at all levels. They encompass experimentation and development within their own specific artistic style of “compressed narrative”.

In Italy, when it comes to the problematic of the shorts (“cortometraggio“), they share similar life that ties also into lack of adequate distribution. Perhaps, a feature not unusual in the international panorama though, definitely present in the “bel paese” back garden. Cortometraggi (Shorts) derive the name from the length of the film used (corto), also known as “metraggio”. This, for full length movies, usually amounts to several thousand meters.

Since the 1980s, that can be set as the reference date for Italy’s renovate interest in the production of shorts, several beautiful gems could be picked like: Drimage (1981) filmed by Silvio Soldini, La guerra appena finita (1983) by Francesca Archibugi, Mario Martone’s Dialoghi di Alphaville (1987), Storie metropolitane (1989) by Marco Bechis, Guido Manuli’s Incubus, (1993), Eros Puglielli’s Il pranzo onirico (1996), Racconto d’inverno by Cristina Catalani, Sei quello che mangi (2002) by Stefano Russo, Adele (2005) by Andrea Fazzini, La Preda (2006) by Francesco Apice, Il gioco (2009) by Adriano Giannini.  

CFI





Short Movies, short history part 2…

23 04 2010

Jean-Luc Godard once said that “all you need for a movie is a gun and a girl”, some might agree… Well we don’t, and year on year KaleidoShorts has shown many outstanding more reasons to enjoy the moving picture. Check this wonderful postr on Godard for more info).

KaleidoShorts is another event organised by the no profit organisation Italian Nights like forthcoming FluidCity, TeatroShorts, the Italian Jazz Festival and many theme nights that focus on a form of art associated with one of its most interesting interpreters or social-cultural debates.

Going back to Godard, one of the founding members of the Nouvelle Vague, the extravagant, unconventional director has filmed several short movies like “La Paresse” (Sloth in 1961), ”Il Nuovo Mondo (The New World in 1962), Reportage sur Orly (Reporting on Orly in 1964), “Anticipation, ou: l’amour en l’an 2000″ (Anticipation: or Love in the Year 2000, in 1967), and many more. The latter, is one of six segments directed by as many directors. It is a french comedy about the oldest profession through the ages.

His first ever movie like for all directors was a short. A story about the construction of a dam, “Opérion béton” filmed in 1954. It was followed only in 1959 by his first full-length film, “A bout de souffle” (Breathless) – link.

Historically, the most important short of Godard was ”Une histoire d’eau” (The Story of Water, 1961). The relevance comes from the short being co-directed with François Truffaut, the other legend of the New Wave movement in cinema. The Story of Water in its 18 minute represent everything that is the French Nouvelle Vague. It takes apart elements from American Film Noir and Italian Neorealism giving to these a typical French nouvelle view (http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x17caj_godard-une-histoire-d-eau_creation).

CFI





Short Movies, short history part 1…

22 04 2010

“Short subjects” was the term used instead of short movies when these first appeared in theatres at the beginning of the century, usually before or after the main feature films. However, with full length movies productions increasing and the arrival of television, short movies declined as they made no financial sense anymore. In fact, with time short films became the training arena for aspiring film makers.

We could say that, if short films had a life cycle then it is one that started as a commercial medium, died, and then reinvented itself as a pedestal for young filmmakers to exhibit their talent. Short movies were also used for experimentation. This still sets this form of visual art a part from their “extended-feature-film” brothers. There are less corporate restrictions on what story to tell and how to tell the story. Not only, especially in Europe, short movies have acquired their own status and are now cinema and, a form of art expression in their own right.

Festival of short movies have flourished since the 1980s and us, Italian Nights, for the 5th consecutive year are paying tribute with our special Festival-way to the art of Cinema and the short movie form of visual expression.

CFI





In the making of KFF V, 2010

22 04 2010

Hi, Here we go again, the engine is moving forward and we have already received a few beautiful shorts!

Following our tradition, this year as well, there will be a few surprises for our public. Stay in touch and if you attended last year feel welcome to send your comments.

KS





KaleidoShorts V, 2010

18 04 2010

Italian Nights announces:

Call for Short Films entries to the 5th edition of KaleidoShort Films Festival.

The final evening of our amazing event will be held in a prestigious venue in central London. To submit your entries refer to the Italian Nights website.

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