heroinefilms ([info]heroinefilms) wrote,
@ 2005-12-07 18:55:00
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the weight of words...

It's been almost a year since Heroine Films started and a lot has happened. I've been posting updates in communities from time to time, but today as I was sitting here thinking about everything I realized it says something about my, our, generation. Everyone always says that we can't get behind a cause...that we are too coddled and too lazy to do anything. But I've seen something completely different.

Not all of you know the whole story, so here it is in nutshell form:

Heroine Films is a production company started by three women. Mel wrote a script which won the New York International Film and Video Festival, at the time it was called "Heroine". In it's most recent form it is "The Gladdest Thing". Before there was ever such a thing as this production company we were supposed to make this film. We had a cast, a crew and most of our financing. Then we held a reading and to make a long, painful story short some influential people found out that the main character is a lesbian. We are in North Carolina. Our financial backers gave into pressure and pulled out. So we lost everything.


A year later, Alex, Mel and I were sitting around trying to figure out what to do. How could we get enough to make it? That's when the idea of grassroots struck. There are people who believe in women making art, there are people who believe that a lesbian voice should be heard. There are people who believe in the passion of doing what you believe in at any cost any way possible. So we started a website, made some t-shirts and undies and hit the blogging communities. And we were STUNNED. In the first week we had so many hits we had to get a bigger website to keep from shutting down. We got donations and letters from all over the world. Including sweet high school girls giving what they could from after school jobs and heartbreaking letters from parents of LGBTQ kids who had been put through hell. These people want to do something...want to change something. Some of you who are on my friend's list now I met b/c you were one of the many who touched our hearts and made us cry with your support. It's been beyond incredible. We even had a lesbian screenprinter donate her services to us. And we quickly made a trailer to help attract investors and show the people supporting us what this could be like. An example--if this is what we can do on borrowed equipment with no crew and almost no money imagine what we can do when we are able to make the film.


Now we have been lucky enough to get a great deal of the funding from a combination of donations and a production company that has put up a large portion. Not all of it yet, but enough that we are confident that finding the rest is more than possible. We have an article coming out in CURVE magazine next week and we are in talks with LOGO about a marketing strategy on their new network. We aren't where we need to be yet but we are so much farther than we thought we'd be when we lost it all...and our hearts and spirits couldn't be higher. My life will never be the same because I now know that people believe in what I'm doing and want to hear the story we are trying to give a voice. I have even more passion because I know I am not just doing it for me...as cheesy as it sounds...I'm doing it for young girls and young LGBTQ people everywhere...to show that you CANNOT silence us.

-Amanda




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[info]chezecakebettie
2005-12-08 01:02 am UTC (link)
this makes me soooo happy. i remember when i first saw you guys post on some lj community and i was so moved by it that i had to send you guys all the cash i had in my wallet, a whole $10... and then when i saw a drawing of mine on your website i freaked out and was like dancing around and stuff. you're totally right, we all just want to do something to change the world and if you have no money or you're a highschooler or if you know what it's like to be abused it's just a monumental experience to be a part of something like heroine films even if it's something small like donating 10 bucks. keep up the fight ladies!

~Kathleen

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[info]burnandshiver
2005-12-08 02:43 am UTC (link)
Thank you so, so much. Things like that mean more to us than you'll ever know. =)

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My best advice
[info]marioxavier
2005-12-08 01:20 am UTC (link)
Alright Ladies,

This is a small bit of advice but it's the best information I can offer, because I'm in a similar boat with all of you.

My current plan is to produce a series of low budget digital movies and release them through this website www.CustomFlix.com/Index.jsp?ref=136765

It sounds silly but I already set up one movie ("Living Dead Lock Up" if you want to look at the page) and I've started selling it already.

It's a nice way to get something out there and do it cheaply and easily. You get your movie out there and you don't risk much. It's a nice place to go when your trying to gain a great reputation while at the same time doing respectable work. Even ESPN, ATOM FILMS, and FOX use this websites service to distribute videos so it's totally on the up and up.

I hope this helps you ladies. I like what your doing and I wish you all the best of luck in your endeavor. Feel free to let me know if you need anything at all.

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[info]cursivebananas
2006-09-24 11:14 pm UTC (link)
I am attempting to be a film major at a college where only film analysis is really available, and would love to be a poorly paid intern if you need one, or if you ever know someone that needs one (and by poorly paid i mean i need to live somewhere, and eat something sometimes)

-ben

i guess just let me know if i can ever do something in the north fl area??

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