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How To Help Your Son Or Daughter Realize Their Filmmaking Dreams

Jennifer Linch With Alexx Thompson

photo courtesy of Actress ?director Jennifer Linch

April 2,2016

the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, If your teen or 20-something thinks it would be amazing to work someday on the kind of films they love – don’t let anything or anyone stop them, says filmmaker Doug Vermeeren.

Often, budding filmmakers are discouraged by advice such as, “You have be realistic and get a real job.”

“But what’s ‘realistic’ about denying a deep passion that may give others the same joy that you’ve received from movies?” asks Vermeeren, whose documentaries have been translated into 23 languages worldwide. He is of the director of the new Calgary Smartphone Film Festival. 

“What if Spielberg or Scorsese – or anyone who has ever done anything great – took the ‘realistic’ advice and accepted a safe career? We wouldn’t have great things.”

Your son or daughter can do what they love for a career, says Vermeeren, whose latest film project is “Creepy Zombies” (www.creepyzombies.com). He offers pointers for parents who want to help their child realize their dream as a filmmaker.

• Help them polish their people skills. It’s all about relationships. How do you get people to work for you before you have money? How do you convince people to do you favors, such as loaning you a vintage car or allowing filming to take place on private property, essentially for free? Again, your kid will need to sell people on their vision, and show them they’re worth rooting for. Make your passion infectious!
• Make sure they monetize! Films are expensive, but so are medical and law schools. Does that mean aspiring lawyers and doctors shouldn’t make the investment? If they believe in their vision, there are various ways for your son or daughter to raise money for the project, including through Vimeo and YouTube.
• Have them seek education wherever they can find it. Film classes are great, but don’t stop there. They should read books about their favorite directors, and enter every film festival they can. Festivals often offer cash prizes. More importantly, judges will critique the project. Their criticisms may be difficult to endure, but they can also greatly improve a young filmmaker’s efforts. 

“There are many obstacles in the way of a film’s completion, so confidence is a must,” Vermeeren says. “The first film is the hardest because figuring out the initial logistics is complicated. The filmmaker needs to get people – actors and anyone with the necessary resources – to commit before there is enough money – and there’s never enough money. People, however, are drawn to passion and determination. They need to put their full heart into it and, eventually, they’ll succeed.”

About Doug Vermeeren

Doug Vermeeren is an internationally renowned public speaker, author, movie producer and director whose latest film project is “Creepy Zombies” (www.creepyzombies.com). He began his career in film as a background extra, actor, photo double and stunt performer on a variety of films, and his documentaries have been translated into 23 languages worldwide.

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Ridgewood Guild Film Festival goes international

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Ridgewood Guild Film Festival goes international

MAY 1, 2015    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, MAY 1, 2015, 12:31 AM
BY MARK KRULISH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

A touch of Hollywood descended upon the Central Business District this week as the red carpet was rolled out for filmmakers taking part in the Ridgewood Guild’s fifth annual International Film Festival.

This year, the festival is truly an international one with entries accepted from Canada, France, Austria and Iran, some of which will be featured on the additional third night at the Ridgewood Public Library on Friday.

“We’re so proud to be calling ourselves an international film festival this year,” said Ridgewood Guild President Tony Damiano. “We received films from 18 different countries and you’ll see them over the course of this evening and we’ve expanded to a third night on Friday evening.”

With a full roster of student films lined up for opening night, many of the festival’s youngest participants attended on Wednesday evening, excitedly posing for photographs in front of the movie premiere backdrop.

Karlee King, a senior at Paramus High School and a newcomer to the festival world, brought three short experimental films with her that feature the common theme of shooting video at abandoned locations.

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/clubs-and-service-organizations/film-festival-goes-international-1.1323147

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Ridgewood Guild Film Festival honors actor Danny Aiello

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Ridgewood Guild Film Festival honors actor Danny Aiello

MAY 1, 2014    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2014, 4:31 PM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER

Oscar-nominated actor Danny Aiello lives in Saddle River, and rarely passes through Ridgewood. That could be changing, the actor said, thanks to his recent foray into the village.

Aiello was named the first-ever celebrity lifetime honoree at the Ridgewood Guild’s annual film festival last week.

The well-known actor was brought to Ridgewood for the second day of the two-day festival, now in its fourth year, thanks to his friend and fellow actor, RJ Konner, a Ridgewood resident. Aiello went out to eat at the new restaurant Mémoire in Ridgewood while the film festival progressed in its entirety in Theatres 1 and 2 of Ridgewood’s Clearview Warner Quad.

“I’ve never been in Ridgewood really for any significant amount of time. I live in Saddle River. I promise that I’ll be here more often,” said Aiello, who blew a kiss to the audience upon returning to the theater after dinner, before taking a moment to praise his meal at Mémoire.

Aiello’s public appearance, including a Q-and-A session, followed a reel of clips played on the screen, featuring some of his best movie work, including scenes from Spike Lee’s “Do The Right Thing” (in his Oscar-nominated role, Aiello played the owner of a Brooklyn pizzeria, a white business in a neighborhood filled with ethnic tensions) and “Moonstruck” (he played Cher’s boyfriend). The clips alternated with Aiello’s more-recent music videos, in which he updates old standards, like “Save The Last Dance For Me,” by crooning in Frank Sinatra-like fashion, with accompaniment from the rapper Hasan.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/clubs-and-service-organizations/ridgewood-guild-film-festival-welcomes-actor-danny-aiello-1.1007166#sthash.L46WH07x.dpuf

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Two film festivals cross cinematic paths

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Two film festivals cross cinematic paths

APRIL 20, 2014, 3:40 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 2014, 3:40 PM
BY JIM BECKERMAN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Two festivals at the same time? Not so good if you’re a kid, and your birthday comes on Christmas. Very good, if you’re a movie fan in North Jersey, and you have two events to choose from.

The Ridgewood Guild Film Festival ( tickets https://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/632575 ), on Wednesday and Thursday, this year coincides with a special presentation by the Northeast Film Festival on Thursday.

Expect movies, personal appearances and a chance to see work by Hollywood’s future Scorseses and Spike Lees.

“They’re previewing films by unknown filmmakers who in a couple of years may be very well known,” says Tony Damiano, president of the Ridgewood Guild. “These are films that people would never ordinarily see.”

Two screens, on two nights running, will be given over to the 4th annual Ridgewood Guild Film Festival at the Bow Tie Cinemas. On Wednesday, student filmmakers from Allendale, Bergenfield, Ho-Ho-Kus, Ridgewood, Cresskill and New York will see their work on the big screen for the first time. There will also be a reprise of winning student films from previous years, and a new film, “Shutterflies,” from past winners Spencer Muhlstock and Hayes Walsh of Ridgewood. “It’s about a boy’s adventures, through his love of film and camera,” Damiano says.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/two-film-festivals-cross-cinematic-paths-1.999815#sthash.UuqJaVI1.dpuf