Peter Gerard | |
---|---|
Born |
Peter Gerard (born in Columbia, Missouri, United States) is a film director, film producer and film distributor. Gerard founded Accidental Media and Distrify, and is currently employed at Vimeo.
Gerard's best known film is Just to Get a Rep - a documentary about the history of graffiti art and its relationship with hip hop. Just to Get a Rep premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2004 and was first broadcast on television in 2007. After broadcasts in France, Australia and Russia and a limited DVD release in Japan, Just to Get a Rep was released via video on demand (VOD) in September 2009 from the film's website. The Special Edition DVD was released in March 2010, also from the film's website. [1]
In 2009, Gerard produced The Shutdown - a short documentary directed by Adam Stafford from the band Y'all Is Fantasy Island, and written by Scottish author Alan Bissett. The Shutdown premiered at Silverdocs and the Edinburgh International Film Festival and went on to win the Jim Poole Scottish Short Film Award, Best Short Documentary at the San Francisco International Film Festival and be nominated for a BAFTA Scotland Award. In the same year, Gerard produced Fistful of Roses – a documentary directed by Leo Bruges – which won the 2010 BAFTA Scotland New Talent Award for Best Factual. [2] In 2010, Gerard directed the short documentary Motion/Static and made a version called Tomorrow's Fairground for broadcast on the BBC. [3]
Gerard's film career began in 2000, with his first documentary Out of Breath (co-directed by Aaron Davis and Peter Gerard), [4] which won the Audience Award at SOFA Film Festival in Portland, Oregon. From 2000 to 2001, Gerard and Davis organised the Bargain Basement Film Festival in Columbia, Missouri. [5]
In 2010, Gerard founded Distrify, an online video service that let film producers and distributors sell movies using online film trailers. The Distrify player could be embedded on any website and always contained an e-commerce shop that could sell VOD, downloads, DVDs, and merchandise as well as list cinema listings. [6] Distrify received start-up funding from Creative Scotland and additional funding from the EU MEDIA Programme. [7] In November 2012, the company signed a deal with Swedish film company Story AB. [8] In October 2012, the distributors of Led Zeppelin's concert film Celebration Day used Distrify to allow fans to express interest in having a showing near them. [9] Gerard was the CEO of Distrify until May 2014.
The Guardian Culture Professionals Network and The Hospital Club named Peter Gerard in the 2013 h.Club100 list – "an annual campaign to identify the 100 most influential and innovative people working across arts, culture and the creative industries in the UK." [10] In connection with the h.Club100 list, Gerard also won the Young Creative Entrepreneur award from the British Council. [11] The award included a trip to Nigeria to meet with creative entrepreneurs in Lagos. [12]
In June 2014, Gerard was appointed Director of Audience Development and Content Operations at Vimeo. [13]
Gerard grew up in Columbia, Missouri, where as a teenager, he started a book publishing business with his family called Whip-Poor-Will Books. The company published two books written by Gerard's grandmother, Sue Gerard. Granny's Notes: My First 84 Years, published in 1998, was produced and designed by Peter Gerard. [14] Just Leave The Dishes, published in 2002 was produced, designed and edited by Peter Gerard. [15]
The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is an independent charity that supports, develops and promotes the art forms of the moving image in the United Kingdom. In addition to its annual awards ceremonies, BAFTA has an international programme of learning events and initiatives offering access to talent through workshops, masterclasses, scholarships, lectures and mentoring schemes in the United Kingdom and the United States.
Gael García Bernal is a Mexican actor and producer. García Bernal is best known for his performances in the films Bad Education, The Motorcycle Diaries, Amores perros, Y Tu Mamá También, Babel, and Coco, and for his role as Rodrigo de Souza in the Amazon Studios' web television series Mozart in the Jungle. He and Diego Luna founded Canana Films in Mexico City.
The Slamdance Film Festival is an annual film festival focused on emerging artists and low-budget independent films, created in 1995.
Timothy Leonard Spall is an English actor and occasional presenter. He became a household name in the UK after appearing as Barry Spencer Taylor in the 1983 ITV comedy-drama series Auf Wiedersehen, Pet.
Peter Dougan Capaldi is a Scottish actor, writer, director, and singer. He portrayed the twelfth incarnation of the Doctor in Doctor Who (2013–2017) and Malcolm Tucker in The Thick of It, for which he has received four British Academy Television Award nominations, winning Best Male Comedy Performance in 2010. When he reprised the role of Tucker in the feature film In the Loop, Capaldi was honoured with several film critic award nominations for Best Supporting Actor.
Antonia Jane Bird, FRSA was an English producer and director of television drama and feature films.
Peter Kosminsky is a British writer, director and producer. He has directed Hollywood movies such as White Oleander and television films like Warriors, The Government Inspector, The Promise, Wolf Hall and The State.
May Miles Thomas is a Scottish film director and screenwriter.
RiP!: A Remix Manifesto is a 2008 open-source documentary film about "the changing concept of copyright" directed by Brett Gaylor.
UTV Motion Pictures is an Indian motion picture company. It is a subsidiary of UTV Software Communications which is inturn owned by the The Walt Disney Company India. From early 2017, UTV suspended producing domestic films, it has been an off-and-on distribution label for Disney's feature films releasing in India since. The studio's activities spanned creative development, production, marketing, distribution, licensing, merchandising and worldwide syndication of films in Indian territories.
Breadmakers is a short 2007 documentary film, directed by Yasmin Fedda and produced by Jim Hickey and Robin Mitchell. This is a film about a unique Edinburgh bakery, where a community of workers with learning disabilities make a variety of organic breads for daily delivery to shops and cafes in the city. The Garvald Bakery is part of a centre inspired by the ideas of Rudolf Steiner where the workers realise their potential for self-discovery and creativity in a social environment. Yasmin said that she was surprised about the response that the film received.
Adam Stafford is a musician and filmmaker based in Falkirk, Scotland. He was the lead singer and songwriter with critically acclaimed Scottish band Y'all is Fantasy Island as well as an award-winning short film maker and solo artist. Stafford was born in Sunderland, England in 1982. In the late 1980s his family moved to Falkirk, where he still resides.
Jig is a 2011 documentary produced and directed by Sue Bourne about the world of Irish dance and the fortieth Irish Dancing World Championships, held in March 2010 in Glasgow.
Matchlight is an independent television production company based in Glasgow. The company specializes in observational documentary, history, arts, current affairs and popular factual television. The company works for many broadcasters in the UK including BBC One, ITV1, BBC Two, BBC Three, BBC Four, BBC Scotland, Channel 4 and Channel 5.
Welcome to New York is a 2014 French-American drama film co-written and directed by Abel Ferrara. Inspired by the Dominique Strauss-Kahn affair, the film was released on 17 May 2014 by VOD on the Internet as the film failed to secure a place on the Official Selection at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, nor was it picked up for theatrical distribution in France. The film faced self-censorship by the French media, according to Vincent Maraval, one of the producers.
Just to Get a Rep is a documentary film directed by Peter Gerard. It premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2004 and played over a dozen international film festivals. The film covers the history of graffiti art and its relationship with hip-hop, from 1970s New York City to the international graffiti culture in the early 2000s.
Indie Rights, Inc. is an American distributor of independent films, based in Los Angeles, California. Indie Rights is a subsidiary of Nelson Madison Films and was incorporated in 2007 to act as distributor for other independent filmmakers. The corporation began as a private MySpace group where the makers of independent films could get information about the changing face of film distribution; founders Linda Nelson and Michael Madison created Indie Rights so that distribution contracts could be signed by a legal entity. The corporation distributes films largely through video on demand services, though more recently it has overseen such theatrical releases as We Are Kings and Fray, both in 2014.
I Am Breathing is a 2013 Scottish/UK documentary feature film directed by Emma Davie and Morag McKinnon and produced by Sonia Henrici and associate producers Alex Usborne and Justin Edgar for 104 films. It follows the last months of Neil Platt, a young father with terminal and debilitating motor neuron disease (MND). It was funded by Channel 4, 104 films, the Scottish Documentary Institute and Danish Documentary Production
Justine Wright is a film editor from Wellington, New Zealand.
Distribber is a Los Angeles-based motion picture distribution company formed in 2007 by Adam Chapnick to help filmmakers distribute motion picture content into popular Video On Demand (VOD) outlets. Distribber distributes feature length narrative and documentary films, short films and television series.