Its film festival
season in Ottawa, and there has never been a better time to be
a filmmaker.
Amateur filmmakers are getting involved in what was once considered
an elite art form.
And it looks like the lure of movie-making magic has captivated
the younger generation as well.
Youth filmmakers those who are younger than 30 years of
age are getting a chance to get their hands dirty as film
production equipment becomes cheaper and more readily available.
There are also more avenues appearing for budding visual artists
to showcase their work, like the annual Canadian National Youth
Film Festival, which had its first run earlier this year.
The youth seem to be taking advantage of these opportunities:
Penny McCann, director of Sussex Annex Works Video better
known as SAW Video has observed that around half of their
229 current members are under the age of 30, and that membership
has grown by about 25 percent in the last two years or so.
High-tech toys, from the humble television to PlayStations and
IPods, are usually seen as bad influences on our youth today.
Technology is blamed for encouraging short attention spans and
couch-potato tendencies.
But the digital video (DV) camera may prove to be an exception.
It might even provide a kind of salvation for teenagers and students.
Take, for example, SAW Videos youth program.
The program trains dropouts and street youth to use
a camera and direct productions, edit films, and write screenplays,
according to Paul Gordon, SAWs youth co-ordinator.
Its a chance for 18- to 30-year-olds who are underemployed
or unable to get a job after leaving school to learn filmmaking
skills.
Students even get paid to participate, and it could be the first
step towards a career in film production.
Besides getting people off the streets and into full-time employment,
programs like this are helping to build the arts community in
Ottawa.
They are also providing these aspiring filmmakers with opportunities
they might not otherwise have been able to afford.
All of this is a pretty good sign for both the future of arts
in Ottawa and the younger generation; more participation by a
diverse group of young filmmakers will likely mean a much bigger
pool of ideas and innovations in the filmmaking industry.
All thats left to be done is for media production outlets
like SAW Video and the Independent Filmmakers Co-operative of
Ottawa to make their presence more widely seen and heard in schools
and elsewhere, so as to give students a taste of what it could
be like to become the next Scorsese or Kubrick. |