8th Annual Coney Island Film Festival

Thursday, May 15, 2008

The 8th Annual Coney Island Film Festival is set for September 26-28, 2008 at Sideshows By The Seashore and The Coney Island Museum in the historic Brooklyn neighborhood Coney Island, New York!

Call for entries 2008 now open. Click here to submit.

Entry categories: Feature, Short, Documentary Feature, Documentary Short, Experimental, Silent Film, Animation, Music Video.

LATE DEADLINE June 25th, 2008 (postmarked)

EXTENDED LATE DEADLINE July 3rd, 2008 (postmarked)



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New York Film Academy Open House

New York Film Academy is having an Open house on Saturday, May 17th, 2008. Click on the image below or go to the Film School's Open House Page for details.




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New York Film Academy’s Picks For Top Twenty Movie Directors Of All Time.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Click on each director's name to read more about why the The New York Film Academy chose each for their film school Top Twenty Directors List.

#20: Sam Peckinpah
The unprecedented cataclysm of blood-soaked violence that wrapped up Sam Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch was a cinematic watershed.

#19: Billy Wilder
Wilder, a young screenwriter struggling to make a name amid the bohemian decadence of pre-War Berlin, heard a tap on his window.

#18: John Ford
When John Ford self-deprecatingly introduced himself with, 'My name's John Ford, I make Westerns', he had a canny sense of the way he would be remembered.

#17: Sergio Leone
After the muscle-man quickie The Colossus Of Rhodes, Sergio Leone directed a mere six films.

#16: Oliver Stone
Where do you start with a problem like Oliver?

#15: Francis Ford Coppola
Age 35, Francis Ford Coppola departed the 1974 Academy Awards clutching statuettes for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay, a place in film history assured.

#14: James Cameron
The future is what we make for ourselves,' is a refrain repeated throughout James Cameron's first film, The Terminator, and it's a phrase he's clearly taken to heart.

#13: The Coen Bros.
It was as dreamy teenagers one soporific 1960s Minnesota summer that Joel and Ethan Coen decided they should make a film.

#12: Sir David Lean
What is often forgotten amid the beautiful reaches of his vision, his rapturous storytelling and tireless quest for perfection, is what a practical soul David Lean was.

#11: Clint Eastwood
When Clint Eastwood decided to direct the thriller Play Misty For Me, with its cautionary view of celebrity, in 1970 he inadvertently took the first step to a kind of cinematic respectability that had thus far eluded him.

#10: Woody Allen
If ever a line has come back to haunt Woody Allen it is the one spoken by one of the aliens in Stardust Memories, an uncharacteristically sour moment of introspection he borrowed from Fellini: "We like your films, especially the early funny ones."

#9: Orson Welles
"The biggest electric train set any boy ever had," pronounced Orson Welles in 1940, surveying his new domain — or, at least, that corner of it occupied by RKO, the studio that had lured the 24-year-old wunderkind to Hollywood with the promise of absolute freedom to make his directorial debut in whatever fashion he saw fit.

#8: Quentin Tarantino
It must be every film geek's wildest wet dream: you start out as a humble video-store clerk, and wind up slamming an adrenaline-loaded syringe into the solar plexus of the American indie movie scene, becoming a filmmaker so influential, film critics turn your name into an adjective.

#7: Peter Jackson
Peter Jackson is a director who seemed to arrive on the Oscar podium a fully formed auteur without the decades of turmoil to back it up. Before making the biggest trilogy of all time, outside a dedicated fanbase and New Zealand, there was awareness of an ability to realise the most complicated book, bar The Bible, in a way that would be so stunningly lauded both by critics and fans.

#6: Akira Kurosawa
Strip away the literary fabric that now shrouds the works of Akira Kurosawa, delve beneath the Japanese costume and external architecture, and you will discover the throbbing heartbeat of the Everyman.

#5: Sir Ridley Scott
Poor old Tony Scott. He may be one of the finest crafters of blockbuster action working today, but he will forever be huddled in the shadow of his elder brother; the auteur to his movie director.

#4: Stanley Kubrick
It has been six years since Stanley Kubrick died, and if he'd kept to his familiar stately schedule, a movie every six or seven years, we'd be due his 13th. Maybe now is when we really start to feel the loss.

#3: Martin Scorsese
When the Academy convenes in a year a Martin Scorsese film is in contention, the phrase "America's greatest living director" seems to magnetically attach itself to sentences containing the director's name. We always thought that it was rather odd that Scorsese never won an Oscar. In 2006 he was vindicated by winning his first Academy Award for Best Director for The Departed, which also won for Best Picture.

#2: Alfred Hitchcock
Take a flight of fancy and imagine if Alfred Hitchcock was plying his trade in Hollywood today. Back at his old Universal stomping ground, he'd probably knock off a Collateral or two, play himself on The Simpsons, exec produce episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents CSI Leytonstone (the place of his birth) and still find time for the odd curio designed to rub everyone up the wrong way --perhaps a shot for shot remake of Good Will Hunting.

#1: Steven Spielberg
In analyzing Steven Spielberg, the first thing you need to do is clamber past Steven Spielberg. The success, the deification, a near unquantifiable contribution to not just cinema but modern culture itself, and the reams of praise that smother him like a giant quilt. Given such a position, it almost feels moot to extol virtues that have been ringing in his ears for years. Thus it is to the films, in the end, you must return, to cut them loose from the hallowed tag and understand again why this small guy from Cincinnati, Ohio stands so tall over the medium.



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Hard Day's Work

Episode 2 of the New York Film Academy 's episodic series “Working Stiffs” is up on our website.

This second episode is titled, "Hard Day's Work."

"Working Stiffs" is a short episodic television program produced by New York Film Academy students. It follows the adventures of two roommates who get canned from their corporate cubical farm jobs, which sets them off on a series of entrepreneurial escapades. Keep up on the antics of these two as they try to make things work on their own terms.

Go to the film school's website to view the latest episode.



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Abu Dhabi Film School

Friday, April 25, 2008

In a post titled, “New York film school comes to a theatre near you,” the ArabAd Zone Magazine blog spoke about the opening of our Abu Dhabi campus and the award winning ad campaign done by TBWA\RAAD & UAE.

Read the post here or go to the film school website.



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New York Film Academy's Animation Program

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Produced at the New York Film Academy in our 1-Year Animation Program. Directed by Marco di Martino. Learn more about the Film School's Animation Program, any of the Film Schools exciting acting, or film making programs!



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Some Of The Best Film Shoot Locations In New York

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

We have listed some of the best locations to shoot a film in New York City here. We of course are partial to the film school's location in Union Square.



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Figuring Out How To Play For "Change"

Monday, April 21, 2008

Former New York Film Academy directing workshop graduate, Jonathan Walls, landed his documentary “Playing For Change” at the Tribeca Film Festival. He had the chance to blog about the experience on HuffingtonPost.com:

The concept of Playing for Change was relayed to me in 1999. I had just finished a directing workshop at the New York Film Academy and was excited to dive into the craft of storytelling on a professional level, but wasn't sure where my path would ignite.

Read the entire post here.



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Two New York Film Academy Students Document Gales Creek In Oregon

Joyce Sauber writing for the Hillsboro Argus has a column on Oregonlive.com that talks about a documentary film made by two New York Film Academy Film School Students:

Who were those girls with the movie camera in the Gales Creek Valley this past week?

Eva Maria "Evi" Rudy and Shannon Marie Welch descended on Gales Creek a week ago to shoot two documentary films about Gales Creek - one about the history of Gales Creek and the other about the LNG pipeline issue.

The two women attend The New York Film Academy at Universal Studios in Los Angeles.

Read the entire article here.



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The New York Times talks about the New York Film Academy & NBC’s Digital Journalism School.

The New York Times reported today about the Broadcast Digital Journalism classes offered at the New York Film Academy's in partnership with NBC:

Straying far afield from its core business of reporting the news, NBC News is getting into the education business.

Readers of media-related Web sites have been bombarded with ads promoting NBC News’s partnership with the New York Film Academy. In Los Angeles, billboards for the four-week, eight-week and one-year digital journalism training programs loom large, part of an aggressive ad campaign to spread the word before the first summer classes.

A crying need for training in digital technologies is one of the motivating forces for its new business venture, NBC News executives said. More than 80 prospective students, some of them midcareer journalists seeking to keep their skills up to date, turned out on April 5 for an open house at NBC’s Rockefeller Center headquarters to promote the program, said Lyne Pitts, an NBC News vice president.

READ ALL ABOUT IT HERE.

About the New York Film Academy & NBC Digital Broadcast Journalism school:

Through study and hands-on practice, students are trained in the fundamental principles, techniques, and craft of digital journalism. This is accomplished through a combination of lecture, demonstration, in-class hands-on production, and the students' own work.

Each student produces a series of prerecorded news projects, shot both single and multi-camera and edited on Final-Cut Pro.

Film School Students who complete this program should be able to confidently produce, shoot, report, record, and edit digital news projects suitable for broadcast. The first semester provides a foundation in digital and journalistic skills that students will apply to more advanced work in the second semester where the focus is on Live, Remote, Satellite, and News show production.



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Film Student News - Justine Feldt

Friday, April 18, 2008

This came by way of the Consuming Louisville website:

Winding Road is a low-budget independent film, funded solely by (Justine) Feldt and her co-producer and assistant director, Claire Thixton. Because of Louisville's thriving art scene and support of independent artists, Feldt was able to find many volunteers and musicians to help make the film a success. The film was entirely shot in Kentucky, with the majority of scenes filmed in the Louisville area. As a female filmmaker, Feldt is an advocate for gender-equality behind the camera. Feldt, who has attended the New York Film Academy and was apart of the 2006 Samsung Fresh Films competition, hopes that Winding Road will lead her to more filmmaking opportunities.

Read more here.



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New York Film Academy In Rome, Italy

Thursday, April 17, 2008

The Film School and Acting School at the New York Film Academy is coming to Rome, Italy with Filmmaking Workshops starting MAY 5th, 2008.

The New York Film Academy is going to Cinecitta Studios in Rome, Italy. We’re holding 4 and 6 week filmmaking workshops in this new location, giving students the opportunity to shoot on Cinecitta Studios sets.

The Workshops start MAY 5th, 2008. A limited number of applications will be accepted.

Email us for more info at cinecitta@nyfa.com.

www.NYFA.com



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1930's Animation Found On YouTube

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

File this under what could have been for animation. Learn more about the film school and it's animation program.



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Miss America Wins New York Film Academy Scholarship

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Magazine Empress Reports:

Another happening in history occurred Friday Evening. Crystle Stewart of Missouri City was another African American to win the miss America Pageant at the Planet Hollywood Hotel. She beat out Leah Lavino of Mississippi and Tiffany Andrade of New Jersey for her crown.

Stewart scored high in three categories the swimsuit, evening gown, and in her interview. She runs a party-planning and motivational speaking company. Stewart also models professionally with dreams on of taking on international philanthropy. Her crown offers her an apartment in New York City, a two year scholarship at the New York Film Academy, and an opportunity to run for the miss Universe Pageant this July.

Read more here.



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Matthew Modine At The Film School

Friday, April 11, 2008

Matthew Modine comes to see student's work from the One-Year Acting for Film workshops. Go to our film school website for more info.



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New York Film Academy's Road To Abu Dhabi

See the news item about our Abu Dhabi film school campus. The story recaps all the media coverage we've been getting.

Bloggers and News media can go here: http://www.newswiretoday.com/news/32622/



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Working Stiffs Premiers On The NYFA Channel

Thursday, April 10, 2008

"Working Stiffs," is our episodic series produced by New York Film Academy Film School students that is showing both at the Film School website and on YouTube. Episode 1 - titled, "9 to 5" kicks off the series. Watch for the next episode, coming soon.




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New York Film Academy Graduate In Top Ten For Short Film Contest

New York Film Academy’s Film School Student John Callejas is looking to make it big with a short film contest at Upromise, a website that helps people save for college. The prize is $25,000 and John hopes that voters will chose his video, “Passion” as the winner. Already “Passion” has made it to the top ten. The rest is up to the American public who can vote at Upromise’s website.

Support our Film School graduate John Callejas is reaching his dream. And congratulations to John for making it this far. New York Film Academy Film School students go far and we applaud them.

Read a full article about John Callejas in the Stony Brook Statesman.



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Carefully tending the future

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Stuart White and Alice White Ages 30 and 28, Hurdle Mills Stuart and Alice run Bluebird Meadows. Alice's love is growing flowers. Stuart is a graduate of the New York Film Academy. They sell Wednesdays at the Carrboro Farmers' Market and Saturdays at the Durham Farmers' Market.

To read the rest, go here.



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‘Bleeping’ ads proving a winner with U.S. audiences

More traction from the New York Film Academy's Film School Promo. This time from U Talk Marketing website.

Why risk a TV ad being censored by the advertising watchdog for containing rude words when self-censorship with a ‘bleep’ or two could win you more viewers than ever imagined?

Mimicking how television and radio broadcasters obscure bad language in live news coverage or taped shows is now being used by U.S. marketers in ads and videos.

Often covering up actual controversial words in a script, the result is often humorous but is also making brands look risqué and edgy while raising the question of what can be considered decent or indecent in society today.

Manufacturers adopting the tactic include Philips for their Norelco Bodygroom product. The soundtrack for the personal trimming device ad created by Tribal DDB Worldwide includes bleeps while images of nuts and a hairy peach are flashed on the screen.

Meanwhile in an ad for Bud Light, also created by DDB and entitled ‘Swear Jar’, employees are shown swearing like troopers in bid to save enough in the jar to buy a case of their favourite beer.

According to the brand, the ad has about 12 million viral views so far, with 2.7 million alone on YouTube.

In another commercial, this time for the New York Film Academy, a dodgy word spoken by the filmmaker Brett Ratner (pictured) is bleeped.

Read the rest here.



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Marketers Find a Sound That Draws a Crowd

IN cartoons, the Road Runner goes “Beep, beep.” On Madison Avenue, the popular onomatopoeia is pronounced “Bleep, bleep.”

Advertisers are winking at the contentious issue of content regulation by using bleeping sounds in commercials and video clips. The bleeps mimic how television and radio obscure bad language in live news coverage or taped reality shows.

Many times, the bleeps heard in commercials are covering actual expletives, which are written into the scripts solely to be censored.

For instance, in a commercial for the New York Film Academy, a crude word spoken by the filmmaker Brett Ratner is bleeped.

“We were playing poker and he lost and I said, ‘Instead of giving me money, why not do a commercial for the film school?’ ” said Jerry Sherlock, director of the academy. “So we made it into a whole joke.”

(Image Caption: The filmmaker Brett Ratner in an ad for the New York Film Academy with a vulgarity covered with a bleep. Ads with bleeped words are gaining popularity.)

Read the rest of the story here.



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Intro to Improv with Kurt Braunohler

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Off the Improv Resource Site:

KURT BRAUNOHLER teaches improv at the The Peoples Improv Theater, New York Film Academy, and Stuyvesant High School. He has run corporate improv workshops for such companies as Pepsi, Red Bull, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He has run workshops at improv festivals across the country as well as in Toronto and Munich. His improv creations include: The One Man Jam — a fully-improvised one man Harold which appeared at the Chicago Improv Festival, the Neutrino Video Projects (chosen for the HBO Aspen US Comedy Arts Festival and awarded "Improv Ensemble of the Year at the Chicago Improv Festival), Chengwin and Chunk, and Kurtbot. He co-hosts a monthly variety show, Hot Tub, with Kristen Schaal, and performs improv every Wednesday at the PIT with the Faculty. He has been improvising in New York since 1998 and teaching since 2002. He was trained by Amy Poehler, Matt Besser, Armando Diaz, Kevin Mullaney, and Ali Farahnakian at the UCB, Rebecca Sohn and Mark Sutton from the Annoyance Theater, Liz Allen, and Miles Stroth from Improv Olympic. He recently created an improv and sketch comedy show for the Noggin Network. Learn more about this class, and other classes at the film school!



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NYFA at Boston College

Monday, April 7, 2008

The Film School at the New York Film Academy will be at the Boston College Admissions Fair!



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Auditions for student film

Sometimes we find things out about our own Film School students from other blogs and website. Here's a case of that so we decided to repost it here. The below was found on freecastingcall.com:

New York Film Academy filmmaking student is looking for actors for her final thesis.
‘Encantada’ is a 9 minute short film that tells the story of how Danny’s childhood is taken away when the only relative he has left is diagnosed with Alzheimer and dementia.

Roles:
Female / 51-60 yrs. / Any Ethnicity.
Gladys: A very sweet and caring grandmother is in charge of her grandson until she gets Alzheimer.

Male / 15-17 yrs. / Any Ethnicity.
Danny: Bright brown eyes, brown hair and very tender face. Danny has to grow up and take care of his grandmother when she is diagnosed Alzheimer

The shooting will take place from May 12th to 18th, 2008. Please send your resume and headshots to: soleafilms [at] gmail [dot] com.



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Resident filmmaker presents screening, discussion at UConn Stamford campus

Friday, April 4, 2008

From the Stamford Advocate about one of our Film School students:

The University of Connecticut in Stamford will hold a screening and discussion of a Friedrich Durrenmatt film adaptation next week.

Resident filmmaker Michael P. O'Toole, a recent UConn graduate and student at the New York Film Academy, will present his first mini-feature, "The Breakdown," based on Durrenmatt's short story "Traps."

The story takes place on a summer day in 1964, when a traveling salesman's car breaks down. The salesman comes across a country house, explains his situation to an old man working in the garden and asks to use the telephone. The salesman is obliged to stay for dinner and the old man, a retired judge, invites two friends over to join them. The three men suggest a parlor game at dinner, a friendly mock trial where the salesman is put in the role of the defendant.
Read the rest of the article here.



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We've Been Blogged!

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Journal Mural do CACS mentioned us and called us "one of the best cinema schools in the whole world."

Aww Shucks! Thanks from the Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy.



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/REPEAT Film Festival Extends Admission Dealine

Various websites are reporting this so we thought we'd jump on the bandwagon, especially since the Film School at the New York Film Academy is a contributing sponsor to the Toronto Student Film Festival.

Toronto Student Film Festival organizers announced an official extension to its entry deadline, due to unprecedented demand this week. High school students now have until Friday, April 4 to submit their short films; entry is FREE.

The TSFF is entirely focused on youth achievement in media arts. Since its inception in 2006, this prestigious festival has received hundreds of submissions from Canada and around the world, giving students a voice to tell their stories. Open to youth 21 & under, the festival features shorts across a range of genres: documentary, drama, animation, comedy, etc. Full details at www.tsff.com.

Prizes include a 4 day CTV "internship," $1,500 tuition to a New York Film Academy Digital Filmmaking Workshop, Motorola RAZR2 media phones, numerous cash awards, on-line feature on the "CitizenShift" web site, Canada's own on-line media community for social change --- plus other film-related prizes.

For 2008, the festival will be on one night only --- Saturday, April 26.

TSFF premiered in Spring, 2006, playing to sell-out crowds and gaining widespread support from the film and educational communities.

Some of Canada's leading arts organizations are involved, including CTV, CitizenShift/National Film Board, the Worldwide Short Film Festival/Canadian Film Centre, Epitome Pictures, and the New York Film Academy. Scotiabank is the lead sponsor.



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The Mayor’s Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting Presents

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

On Monday, April 14, the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting will present “Behind the Lens: An In Depth Look at the Business of Media.” The panel will take place at the Time Warner Center and will explore various non-production career paths for young people and other professionals new to the media industry.

A range of panelists will convene to discuss the corporate side of the entertainment industry. The panelists will share their experiences working in New York City, examining the industry from different perspectives. This is the first panel from the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting about non-production media jobs in the city.

Commissioner Katherine Oliver will moderate the panel with a Q&A session and reception to follow.

Panelists include:

Miguel Ferrer, Director of Programming, AOL Latino and AOL Mexico

Jackie Glover, Vice President, Documentary Programming, HBO

Meg Simon, Vice President, Casting, Warner Bros. Television

William Thompson, Executive Vice President, Co-General Sales Manager, Picturehouse

“There is a wealth of career opportunities in the film and television industry beyond those in front of and behind the cameras. New York City offers a thriving business entertainment sector, and this panel serves to shed light on these often unexplored occupations,” said Katherine Oliver, Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting. “Our local entertainment industry employs 100,000 New Yorkers and contributes $5 billion to our economy on an annual basis, and as we attract new production business to the City and create new jobs through the ‘Made in NY’ incentive program, we are working to ensure that a diverse group of New Yorkers have access to these positions, through programs such as this panel.”

Seating for the panel is limited and available on a first come, first served basis. RSVP by sending an email to rsvp@film.nyc.gov by Friday, April 11.

Visit www.nyc.gov/film for more information about time and specific location. Panelists are subject to change.



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Bart Mastronardi Likes To Teach At NYFA. Then Scare The Bejeezus Out Of You.

Dave over at the Dave’s Horror Reviews Blog has posed his “10 Questions for...” series of posts to New York Film Academy Film School instructor, Bart Mastronardi. The post says that:

When he's not teaching, the inimitable Bart Mastronardi can usually be found behind the camera on some of the most recognized independent horror films currently hitting the scene. From Alan Rowe Kelly's The Blood Shed to his upcoming masterpiece, Vindication, Bart's talent is evident in every scene.

In the interview Mr. Mastronardi had good things to say about his teaching as well as his filmmaking:

Teaching changed my life because it pointed me in all the right directions, plus I give share with students what I have learned. I teach English, film, photography and drama for HS students and I also teach at New York Film Academy.

Read the entire Q&A over at Dave’s Horror Reviews Blog.

If you want to find out more about Bart Mastronardi, head over to his MySpace page.

For more information about the Film School at the New York Film Academy, see us on the web.



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We Are Not Alone, In Abu Dhabi

Monday, March 31, 2008

Seems that the New York Film Academy's Abu Dhabi campus is quite a pioneer in the the UAE.

MGM just followed suit with their own deal to open a studio there, which follows "a string of pacts between Hollywood studios and business interests in the United Arab Emirates," according to a variety report.

nice to know that the Film School at the New York Film Academy is an innovator on both side of the globe.

MGM has inked a massive deal with Abu Dhabi-based real estate developer Sorouh and Jordanian animation shingle Rubicon to create an entertainment destination using MGM and Rubicon franchises.

To read the enitre article on the Variety website go here.



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Joshua Leonard, One "Beautiful Loser" From NYFA

Thursday, March 27, 2008

New York Film Academy Alumni, Joshua Leonard, has an impressive body of work. You may remember Joshua from his starring role in the feature, “The Blair Witch Project” which ran a very successful viral marketing campaign to promote the documentary style film. He also acted in the HBO Films production “Live From Baghdad” starring Michael Keaton and has many other film and television credits. Most recently, Joshua directed a documentary called “Beautiful Losers” about the DIY artistry of creative people involved in underground movements during the Nineties.



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NYFA Alum Produces “A Four Letter Word”

indieWIRE, a celebrated website for and about the international independent film community, interviewed Director Casper Andreas' about his second feature film, "A Four Letter Word." The film is set to be self-released by the director on March 28 in New York City and April 11 in Los Angeles.

NYFA Film Schoool graduate, Markus Goetze, produced the film with Andreas.

When asked by indieWIRE to give advice to emerging filmmakers, he said, “To follow your bliss.”

At 12:15PM on Saturday March 29th there will be a screening of "A Four Letter Word" at the Chelsea Clearview. Andreas will be there with my Markus Goetze and they will host an extended filmmaking seminar afterwards.

If you still need more guidance in filmmaking techniques, come to the premier Film School in the world, The New York Film Academy to see how our “hands-on technique” to filmmaking can make you a movie-making star.

Read the entire interview at indieWIRE.com.



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NYFA In Abu Dhabi

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

The website Singles In Larkin Ar mentioned our Abu Dhabi Film School & Acting School location as a part of a larger push by the UAE goverment to increase the region's cultural and film profile. While we are in good company there, we think of ourselves as the crowning jewel of the desert

The New York Film Academy in Abu Dhabi, which opened its doors in February, is the latest addition to a multilayered push by the oil capital to reinvent itself as a regional hub for culture and film...
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Animation Studio ImagesChain Strengthens Top Management Team to Spearhead Growth Initiatives

ImagesChain, a fast growing animation studio based in Bangalore, announced appointment of Sachin Chandavarkar as Head of Business Development. Sachin will be responsible for client relationships, developing alliances and managing investor relations. Sachin has diverse experience and has a track record in building and managing alliances and relationships.Sachin joins founder Adarsh Jain, an alumnus of the Indian Institute of Technology, NYU and New York Film Academy, and plans to significantly enhance its world-wide presence while simultaneously increasing customer base and revenue generating opportunites from Intellectual Propety.

Read the rest of the article about our Film School alumni here.



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Sports Loss, Our Gain?

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

The Manly Daily website reports that:

FOR most 13-year-olds, dislodging a kneecap leaving you unable to play sport would be a nightmare, but for Manly's Callan McAuliffe it opened a doorway of opportunity.

In December he will fly to the US, where he has secured a spot at the New York Film Academy and will be trained in acting.

"That should be pretty exciting," Callan said.

Read the rest of the article here.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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On The Road To Abu Dhabi With NYFA

Friday, March 21, 2008

Reuters UK reported about the New York Film Academy’s newest campus in Abu Dhabi, UAE. This past February, the Film School at the New York Film Academy opened up a location there.

The Reuters’s story reports:

The film school, which maintains branches in Europe and the U.S., has been seeking to expand into the Middle East for some time, according to John Sammon, former director of education at the NYFA program at Universal Studios near Los Angeles and head of the new school here.


"We've always looked at laying down roots in the Middle East, and when the Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage approached us, it just seemed like the most logical thing to do," Sammon said. "There's a lot going on in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, in terms of investments in film and cinema -- Warner Bros., Abu Dhabi Media Co. and Harvey Weinstein have all invested here. We're their project"

Read the entire article on the Reuter’s website.

The New York Film Academy’s Film School also offers classes in their other locations in California and New York, as well as special programs in plenty of other locations.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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Kudos Goes To NYFA Graduate, Paul Dano For There Will Be Blood Role

New York Film Academy graduate, Paul Dano, played twin brothers, Eli and Paul Sunday in the acclaimed 2007 film “There Will Be Blood,” opposite actor, Daniel Day-Lewis. Inspired by (but not based on) Upton Sinclair's novel, Oil!, the movie tracks Day-Lewis’s character, the ruthless Daniel Plainview, a silver miner who discovers oil in turn of the century America. Paul Dano’s character Eli Sunday, a young preacher with high ideas of his own for the oil money, comes into conflict with Plainview as he threatens the oil man’s plans to dominate all the land’s reserves.

Paul Dano’s acting credits include Little Miss Sunshine & LIE, among other productions including “A Christmas Carol,” “Ragtime,” “Inherit the Wind,” and more on Broadway. For his roles in LIE he won various awards and he nabbed the SAG Award for “Little Miss Sunshine.”

Rumors abound for Dano’s next roles including a voice over part in the film version of the beloved children’s story, “Where the Wild Things Are,” scheduled for a 2009 release.

The Film & Acting Schools at The New York Film Academy congratulate Paul Dano on his awards and for his spectacular performance in the award-winning film, "There Will Be Blood."

The New York Film Academy is a premier Film & Acting School with a “learning by doing” approach to teaching all aspects of filmmaking including, directing, producing, editing, acting, and scriptwriting. We also offer programs in digital journalism in conjunction with NBC News.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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J352 Talks About NYFA Digital Journalism

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The J352: Online Journalism Blog talked about the New York Film Academy's Digital Jounrnalism Program in conjunction with NBC News. See more about the Film School at NYFA and the Digital Journalism Courses on the New York Film Academy Website.


I came across this website for the New York Film Academy where they have decided to team up with NBC News to train the next generation of journalists who will be prepared to navigate the evolving landscape of digital journalism. The NY Film Academy's website in the past offered information on digital film making, screen writing, and 3-D animation. Now it has information on online journalism and their one year broadcast journalism program.

Read the entire post about our the New York Film Academy's and NBC's Digital Journalism Program at The J352: Online Journalism Blog.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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Former Film Student, Anne Sophie, Wins Awards For Her NYFA Student Film, Then Snags Feature Film Financing.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Anne Sophie was a graduate from one of The New York Film Academy’s short-term filmmaking class in Universal Studios. In three months she made a student film that brought her international notice. All at the tender age of 15!

Anne sent us a note that said:

The NYFA has literally, and I mean it, changed my life! I took a 3 month weekend filmmaking class in the Fall of 2006 (I was 15) without expecting much. The short film I made at the end of the program landed some international awards and allowed me to finance my first feature film, FADED MEMORIES, that will be out this year!

See and interview with Anne Sophie on KTLA:

My interview on the Morning Show - Los Angeles


When you are done watching the interview, head over to the Film School at New York Film Academy and see what else if up.

You can view some more student films from the film school at the New York Film Academy on the website.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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NYFA Graduate John Sammon Traded Law For Film

The Gulf News Website has a story about one of the Film School at New York Film Academy’s former Film Students, John Sammon.

They write:

He ditched law school for a degree in filmmaking at the New York Film Academy. Today John Sammon, an accomplished filmmaker, is the director of the same Academy, which opens a branch in Abu Dhabi next month.

The art of storytelling is a gift most possess, but the art of visual storytelling has to be learnt.

And this is what John Sammon, director of the New York Film Academy (NYFA), has set out to do.

Storytelling is intricately woven in the UAE's culture as many a traditional tale is narrated around winter fires
and cool majlises.

Sammon's plan is to take these stories to the big screen in his latest role as director when NYFA opens its third campus next month in Abu Dhabi, its first branch offering yearly courses outside the US.

The reason, states Sammon, is the large population of young talent, the tradition of storytelling and the strong leadership that supports and encourages artistic expression. The Academy aims to educate the region's gifted and talented storytellers.

To read the full article about this NYFA Film School graduate go here.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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Arun Vaidhyanathan on Balu Mahendra

Friday, March 14, 2008

New York Film Academy’s Film School graduate Arun Vaidhyanathan was featured on the Bollywood website TamilStar.com. He spoke about “‘Acchamundu Acchamundu,” the next movie he is planning to direct in India. He said that despite his New York Film School training he still admires inspirational filmmakers of India like Balu Mahendra.

The site said that:

Arun Vaidhyanathan, a graduate from New York Film Academy is now set to ready of shooting for his next movie titled ‘Acchamundu Acchamundu’. The film features Prasanna and Sneha in lead roles and Director Arun himself has revealed that AA would be a suspense-horror-thriller based on global issue.

Read the entire post about Arun Vaidhyanathan at TamilStar.com.



This blog is published by The Film School & Acting School at the New York Film Academy. Visit our website to learn more about our exciting curriculum!

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