Ira Deutchman | |
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Born | |
Occupation(s) | Independent producer, distributor, marketer |
Years active | 1975-present |
Ira Deutchman is a producer, distributor and marketer of independent films. [1] [2] [3] [4] In 2000, he moved into film exhibition as co-founder and managing partner of Emerging Pictures, [5] a New York-based digital exhibition company, which was sold in January 2015 to Vancouver-based 20 Year Media. [6] He also served as Chair of the Film Program at Columbia University School of the Arts from 2011 to 2015, [7] [8] where he has been a Professor since 1987. Deutchman is a member of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He was one of the original creative advisors to the Sundance Institute [9] and formerly served on the board of advisors for the Sundance Film Festival. He has also served as a board member and former board chair for the Independent Feature Project, [10] the board of advisors for the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival, the Williamstown Film Festival, IFP/West, and the Collective for Living Cinema, and was a member of the board for Kartemquin Films. [11]
Deutchman continues to produce films, consults on the marketing and distribution of independent films and teaches producing students in the MFA Film Program at Columbia University's School of the Arts. Current projects include a film adaptation of Barbara Ehrenreich's best-selling book "Nickel and Dimed," a theatrical adaptation of Joan Micklin Silver's 1976 independent film "Hester Street" [12] and a documentary about art film maverick Donald Rugoff, which premiered at the 2019 DOC NYC Festival in New York. [13] He consults for Cinecitta on the marketing of Italian cinema in the United States. Deutchman was awarded the first annual Spotlight Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2017 Sundance Art House Convergence. [14]
Deutchman was born in Cherry Point, NC, on a military base, where his father was serving in the Marines. The family then moved to the Bronx. He spent his formative years on the south side of Chicago, graduating from the Myra Bradwell School in 1967. In his early teen years, his family moved briefly to Highland Park, a northern suburb of Chicago, before moving to New Jersey, where he graduated from Paramus High School. He returned to the Chicago area to attend Northwestern University, graduating in 1975 with a BS in Speech, with a major in Radio, TV, Film.
While still in college at Northwestern University, Deutchman organized and marketed the Midwest premiere of John Cassavetes' A Woman Under the Influence . Shortly after graduation in 1975, Deutchman began his professional career, working under Don Rugoff [15] [16] at Cinema 5 Ltd., where he began in non-theatrical sales, moving into advertising before being named Director of Acquisitions. While there, he worked on the marketing of a number of high-profile art films such as "Scenes from a Marriage", "Monty Python and the Holy Grail", "Swept Away", "Harlan County USA; and "Pumping Iron."
Deutchman was one of the original founding team of United Artists Classics, [17] [18] where he worked as Director of Advertising and Publicity on such films as "Lili Marleen" (Rainer Werner Fassbinder), "Diva" (Jean-Jacques Beineix), "The Last Metro" (François Truffaut), "Lola" (Rainer Werner Fassbinder), and "Cutter's Way" (Ivan Passer), as well as the re-release of "New York, New York" (Martin Scorsese) and "The Last Waltz" (Martin Scorsese). From United Artists Classics he moved on to become one of the founding partners for a number of distribution companies that made an impact on the independent film business, including Cinecom Pictures (originally called Cinecom International Films); [19] Fine Line Features; [20] and Redeemable Features. [21]
At Cinecom Pictures (1982–1988), [22] where Deutchman was co-founder and president, Deutchman released films including "A Room With a View," [23] "Swimming to Cambodia," "El Norte," "The Brother from Another Planet" and "Stop Making Sense." After Cinecom, Deutchman formed Deutchman Company Inc. to act as a producers' rep and marketing consultant. The company worked on "Sex, Lies, and Videotape" (winner of the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival), "Metropolitan" and "To Sleep with Anger" among others.
While working as a consultant on Whit Stillman's "Metropolitan" for New Line Cinema, Deutchman was recruited to create a new specialized division of the company, which became Fine Line Features. Fine Line had an extraordinary five-year run from 1990-1995 under founder and president Ira Deutchman, [24] [25] distributing such critically acclaimed films as "Hoop Dreams," [26] " The Player," [27] "Short Cuts," "Night on Earth," [28] "My Own Private Idaho" "Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle." [29]
Deutchman left Fine Line in 1995, to co-found independent film production company, Redeemable Features, [30] with partners Peter Newman and Greg Johnson. Films included Tony Vitale's "Kiss Me, Guido," Sarah Kernochan's "All I Wanna Do," Adam Davidson's "Way Past Cool" and Tanya Wexler's "Ball in the House."
As co-founder of Emerging Pictures, [31] Deutchman was an early promoter of digital film exhibition. In 2010, he launched "Movie Tweeviews," [32] a curated, crowd-sourced 140-word film-review Twitter site that includes critics (e.g. Caryn James, Thelma Adams, Joe Leydon), curators, distributors, fans and filmmakers. Deutchman is a frequent speaker on the subject of digital film exhibition and marketing at U.S. and international conferences, including those hosted by Power to the Pixel, [33] the Producers Guild of America, [34] and the Motion Picture Association. [35] He is also a regular speaker and moderator each year at U.S. and international film festivals, including the Cannes Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, SXSW, Guadalajara Film Festival, [36] Traverse City Film Festival, Tribeca Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival, IFP Independent Film Week, San Francisco International Film Festival and the São Paulo International Film Festival. [37] He has twice been a keynote speaker at the Art House Convergence annual conference, [38] [39] a conference of mission-driven art house theaters held every January in Midway Utah.
Deutchman began teaching at Columbia University in 1987 as an adjunct professor in the MFA Film Program of the School of the Arts. His first course in Marketing and Distribution of Feature Films has been taught continuously since, and is now called The Business of Motion Pictures. [40] He became a full-time Associate Professor in 2000, and was promoted to full Professor in 2009. He was named Chair of the Film Program in July 2011 [41] and served until 2015.
Deutchman is married and has two children. His son, Jeff Deutchman, is also in the film business; in 2013, after seven years at IFC Films, he moved to Paramount Pictures as Director of Acquisitions (Home Entertainment Division) and then in 2014 to Alchemy, where he served as VP of Acquisitions until 2016.; he is currently Senior Vice President of Acquisitions and Production for Neon; [42] he is also the director/editor/producer of the documentary film "11-4-08", [43] about Obama's presidential election. Deutchman's daughter, Emily Deutchman, is an artist and furniture maker, [44] and his wife, Beth Krieger, was communications director at a New York City independent school until 2019.
In 2015, Deutchman donated his extensive personal archives to the University of Michigan, [45] which also includes the archives of Orson Welles, Robert Altman, John Sayles, Alan Rudolph and Nancy Savoca. Deutchman's collection includes over 40 years of documentation and artifacts of the independent film business from his time at Cinema 5 until the present.
In 2019, Deutchman completed a feature documentary as both producer and director entitled Searching for Mr. Rugoff . The film premiered at DOC NYC in November 2019, and went on to play at the 2020 Palm Springs Film Festival, 2020 Cleveland Film Festival, 2020 Il Cinema Ritrovato Festival in Milan, Italy and the 2020 Mill Valley Film Festival among others. The film was received positively by critics, including Godfrey Chesire of RogerEbert.com, who called it "A beautifully structured tale of movie love. “Searching for Mr. Rugoff” is both dramatic and enlightening, a moving document of an American life that has a bit of “Citizen Kane” to it. [46] Nicolas Rapold in the New York Times called it "An essential history of film culture. I got the warm-and-fuzzies from seeing the love here for moviegoing." [47] The film was released in theater in August, 2022 as a benefit for the re-opening of art house theaters after pandemic closures. [48]
Director's name in brackets after film title.
Director's name in brackets after film title.
Other Producer Credits: Associate Producer of John Sayles’ "Matewan" (1987) and "Honeydripper" (2007); Consulting Producer on the CBS sitcom "Some of My Best Friends" (2001).
Films marketed and distributed by Deutchman include:
John Thomas Sayles is an American independent film director, screenwriter, editor, actor, and novelist. He is known for writing and directing the films The Brother from Another Planet (1984), Matewan (1987), Eight Men Out (1988), Passion Fish (1992), The Secret of Roan Inish (1994), Lone Star (1996), and Men with Guns (1997).
An independent film, independent movie, indie film, or indie movie is a feature film or short film that is produced outside the major film studio system in addition to being produced and distributed by independent entertainment companies. Independent films are sometimes distinguishable by their content and style and how the filmmakers' artistic vision is realized. Sometimes, independent films are made with considerably lower budgets than major studio films.
Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean is a 1982 comedy-drama film and an adaptation of Ed Graczyk's 1976 play. The Broadway and screen versions were directed by Robert Altman, and stars Sandy Dennis, Cher, Mark Patton, Karen Black, Sudie Bond, and Kathy Bates.
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Lance Weiler is an American filmmaker and writer from Pennsylvania, and the Director of the Digital Storytelling Lab at Columbia University School of the Arts. He first was known for The Last Broadcast (1997), a found footage horror film which he co-wrote, co-produced, co-directed, and co-starred in with Stefan Avalos. The Last Broadcast made cinematic history on October 23, 1998 as the first all-digital release of motion picture to be stored and forwarded via geosynchronous satellite. Initially working as an assistant cameraman and camera operator on large commercial shoots, in Pennsylvania and later New York City, Weiler is known for increasing work in experimental combinations of film, AI, gaming, and related media.
R. J. Cutler is an American filmmaker, documentarian, television producer and theater director.
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River of Grass is a 1994 American drama film directed by Kelly Reichardt in her feature film directorial debut. Reichardt wrote the screenplay from a story by her and Jesse Hartman. It was selected for the Sundance Film Festival and the Berlin International Film Festival, and was nominated for the Sundance Grand Jury Prize and four Independent Spirit Awards.
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