Wednesday, December 22, 2010

HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM CARIBBEANTALES!

Dear Friends,
MERRY XMAS & HAPPY HOLIDAYS 
from CARIBBEANTALES!

And for your listening pleasure...
 Enjoy the Season with Sprang!!!!

We found this wonderful song on Youtube ...!
Click to hear hilarious good cheer from T&T's inimitable Sprangalang!
 

(P.S.It's not too late to buy your Holiday videos 
from CaribbeanTales!!
Visit our Youtube Channel to peruse and choose your favourite 
Caribbean films - Give them to your friends as the perfect gifts!)



Love and hugs from all of us at CaribbeanTales

Thursday, December 2, 2010

NEW RELEASES

Our New Releases Explore Calypso's Golden Age and a Young Woman's Search for Family

CALYPSO DREAMS: Click to view Trailer
DEC 2010: NEW RELEASES

CALYPSO DREAMS
Director: GEOFFREY DUNN and MICHAEL HORNE
Trinidad and Tobago | 2004 | Doc | 85 mins | Eng. | PG
Film Trailer | Film Web Site | About the Filmmakers

CALYPSO AT DIRTY JIM'S
Director: PASCALE OBOLO
Trinidad and Tobago | 2005 | Doc | 85 mins | Eng. | PG
Film Trailer | Film Web Site | About the Filmmaker


RAIN
Director: MARIA GOVAN
Bahamas | 2008 | Drama | 93 mins | Eng. | 14A
Film Trailer | Film Web Site | About the Filmmaker


Saturday, November 20, 2010

Stories from Camilo C. Antonio


Mr. Antonio is a lyric poet ; former Director, Human Resources Development Branch and the Asia-Pacific Bureau of UNIDO; recipient of the Millennium Philippine Presidential "Pamanang Pilipino" (National Heritage Award 2000).

On a three-day visit to Toronto in 2000, I was hugely impressed by the scene as the city prepared for the 25th Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF). Re-visiting Toronto ten years later, I had more time to immerse myself in the city’s dynamic features. I went there in the beginning of September to support a group of 25 outstanding Caribbean filmmakers who were selected to pitch their film projects in the world’s biggest and busiest marketplace for films, known by those in the business simply as TIFF.

Caribbean Filmmakers at CTWD Incubator during TIFF 2010
The group was part of a larger vision and strategy to brand the Caribbean region as a market for ventures in the film industry. The exercise included a market development programme with consultant-mentors who coached the participants in the aesthetic as well as business aspects of presenting their strategies and plans to would-be financing partners. Frances-Anne Solomon spearheaded this initiative as CEO of Caribbean Tales Worldwide Distribution (CTWD), a newly established company that was launched during the Festival. CTWD aims to fill the gap and to meet the demand from international investors & distributors for a regional mechanism that promotes and sells Caribbean-themed audiovisual products. Growing up in Toronto, where she also studied and has established networks, the internationally acclaimed Canadian filmmaker of Trinidadian heritage was well placed for this role.

Read More... 

Saturday, November 13, 2010

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution and New York's Autonomous Entertainmment sign partnership deal.

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution and
New York's Autonomous Entertainmment sign long-term agreement.

Toronto, Canada – Thursday, November 15, 2010 - - CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution, the first film distribution company in the English-speaking Caribbean, and New York-based boutique marketing and distribution consultancy firm Autonomous Entertainment Inc. have entered into a long-term partnership to promote and sell Caribbean films and television programs worldwide. Under the terms of the agreement, Autonomous Entertainment will handle CTWD's acquisitions, and help with sales, marketing and outreach of CTWD's catalogue in the US and around the world. In addition, CTWD and AEI will collaborate on a number of planned special releases and events featuring Caribbean filmed content over the next months and years.

AEI is led by CEO Michelle Materre, a veteran of the independent film distribution and marketing business. In 1991, as co-founder and Vice President of KJM3 Entertainment Group, Michelle oversaw the theatrical distribution of Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust, the first film by an African American female director to be released theatrically in the United States.
Michelle Materre, CEO of Autonomous Entertainment Inc
Since then she has held management positions across the industry including Curator of the Channel Thirteen/WNET series Reel New York, Executive Director of International Film Seminars at the Robert Flaherty Film Seminars, Associate Director at Women Make Movies, and Director of Distribution for Third World Newsreel. She is the founder and curator of the Creatively Speaking film series at BAM cinematek. In 2009 she formed Autonomous Entertainment with Head of Operations Cedric Beasley and Head of Production Paul Gennaro to bring greater visibility to independent film, illustrating how entertaining and informative work can also be commercially viable, high quality and low cost without compromise.

"We are very pleased to be working with AEI," says CTWD's CEO Frances-Anne Solomon, "It makes alot of sense because of the many synergies we share. Michelle's experience in marketing and distributing films in the US that are specifically targetted to our markets, is invaluable to us. It is a partnership that will provide both CTWD and AEI with immediate growth opportunities in the US and worldwide through our combined networks."

Michelle Materre says: "We are thrilled to form this unique partnership with CTWD, and are committed to bringing the work of Caribbean filmmakers to as broad an audience as possible. I am certain that this collaboration with CTWD, combining community engagement with new technologies, will set a groundbreaking model for how distribution works in the very near future. We look forward to all the possibilities."

ABOUT CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution:

Established in May 2010, CTWD is a full service marketing and distribution company that acquires exclusive, long term rights to Caribbean-themed content for television, educational, home entertainment and Internet distribution. The company also holds marketing events through the CaribbeanTales Film Festival Group, and provides co-production services to producers. Positioned to become the go-to solution for producers and buyers seeking quality content, CTWD is led by Frances-Anne Solomon, founder and Chief Executive Officer, with other principals including Creative Industries specialist Dr Keith Nurse (Chair), celebrated economist Dr Terrence Farrell, Producer Lisa Wickham, and filmmaker Mary Wells. The organization was launched internationally with a Market Development Program for Caribbean producers during the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival, and already holds the rights to almost 40 projects. CTWD is a member of the Barbados Business Enterprise Corporation that provides Seed and Venture Capital Services.

For more information visit CTWD at www.CaribbeanTales-Worldwide.com, and AEI at www.AutonomousEntertainment.com

CTWD Media Contact:
Kevin Pennant, Pennant Media Group,
Tel: (416) 416.596.2978
E-mail: kp@pennantmediagroup.com

Monday, October 11, 2010

OUR 2010-2011 CATALOGUE IS ONLINE NOW!

Dear Colleagues and Friends,2010/11 Distribution Catalogue

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution is open for business! And  just in time for the new semester, we are delighted to announce our 2010 - 2011 Catalogue.
CTWD offers you unique audio-visual content by Caribbean film makers from the region and the Diaspora.We have added 12 new programs to our inventory.    
Enjoy our classy new layout, which makes it easier for you to find material work in your field of study. You may also download a copy of our 2010/11 Film Distribution Catalogue (5.5 MB pdf). Consult our Pricing Guidelines. Then buy online for your institution or not-for-profit organisation. For more information, please contact us.

__________________________________________

2010-2011 CATALOGUE
FEATURE FILMS » DOCUMENTARIES » SERIES » SHORT FILMS » MUSIC VIDEOS

Sunday, October 10, 2010

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS - CARIBBEANTALES 2011

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

“VISION, MOMENTUM, ACTION!”

CaribbeanTales 2011 – Film Marketplace
February 22 - March 2, 2011 in Barbados.

CaribbeanTales has had an amazing year!

Following the success of our 2010 Symposium and Marketplace that attracted not only regional film professonals and audiences, but buyers and executives from South Africa, the USA and Canada, CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc. was launched in Barbados in May, aimed at creating money-making opportunities for producers of Caribbean content.

In September 2010, CTWD hosted the first CaribbeanTales Market Development Program for a contingent of 40 filmmakers and industry stakeholders during the Toronto International Film Festival. Building on this momentum, CaribbeanTales is delighted to announce the following opportunities for filmmakers:

* CTWD FILM SHOWCASE and COMPETITION: We will select and screen 7 features and 14 shorts in Competition. If selected for Screening your film will be evaluated for distribution potential by a panel of international specialists. Awards will be presented for Best Feature Film ($5000 US value), and Best Short Film under 40 minutes ($2500 US value).

* CTWD FILM INCUBATOR: 10 projects in development will be selected for inclusion in our 6-day intensive Incubator aimed at honing your projects to make them distinctive, commercially viable, and market-ready for the international marketplace. Cash and in-kind awards will be presented for the best Pitches.
International Director Julie Dash leads a packed audience at her Directing Masterclass at CT2010
Please send all submissions to CaribbeanTales@gmail.com. Completed films can be sent via YOUSENDIT or other file-sharing programs. Or you can send your film by post to: CARIBBEANTALES 2011 SUBMISSIONS, Flat B Dalton Villas, Brighton Beach Road, St Michael Barbados.

All submissions should include the following information: Name of film; director/producer/production company; length of film; date of release; country of production.

**Submission Deadline: DEC 15, 2011

**Please note that submissions will not be returned.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

CaribbeanTales WorldWide Distribution gets off to a flying start at the Toronto International Film Festival

Jamaican-Canadian Producer and Actor Tonya Lee Williams, with Barbadian Filmmaker and Director of the Bridgetown Film festival Mahmood Patel (left) and Rubadiri Victor, artist and filmmaker from Trinidad (right).
Caribbean filmmakers descended on Toronto in numbers for the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) held at various venues around Toronto from September 9th to 19th. These filmmakers, some new to the craft and others experienced hands, were assembled by the energetic filmmaker and producer Frances-Anne Solomon and her colleagues from Caribbean Tales Worldwide Distribution Inc., a newly-formed distribution company whose mission is to bring Caribbean films to the world.

View photos from the Launch HERE.

TIFF Co-director Cameron Bailey who is Barbadian-Canadian, speaking at the Launch of CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution, flanked by Trinidadian filmmaker and CTWD Founder/CEO Frances-Anne Solomon, and Dr Keith Nurse CTWD Board Chair.
Some of the filmmakers present included Mary Wells of Jamaica, Tony Hall of Trinidad and Tobago, Sharon Lewis of Toronto, and Allison Saunders of Barbados. In all 25 filmmakers from across the region participated in a 3-day Incubator Workshop held at the University of Toronto to develop and hone their marketing and presentation skills. The workshop was facilitated by Michelle Materre of New York and Tanya Mudaly of the South Africa Broadcasting Corporation. They went on to participate in several TIFF events including the ReelWorld Indie Networking Event hosted by Tonya Lee Williams.

Barbadian filmmaker and producer Penelope Hynam, with CTWD Director Dr Terrence Farrell, and CTWD Board Chair Dr Keith Nurse.
View more photos from the Launch HERE.

Ms Solomon expressed her delight at the strong participation of Caribbean filmmakers at TIFF thanks to sponsorship from UNIDO, Caribbean Export, Canada Council for the Arts, Invest Barbados, Caribbean Airlines and the Commonwealth Foundation. She said “It was exciting to organize this event and very gratifying to see Caribbean and Diapora filmmakers network with each other, make valuable contacts in the world of film and sharpen their pitching skills. I feel that Caribbean film is about to take off and Caribbean Tales Worldwide Distribution will be the spearhead of the effort to bring Caribbean stories to global audiences.” She went on to state “We will be hosting the Second Caribbean Tales Film Festival and Symposium in Barbados in February 2011 and we will be back in Toronto for TIFF in September 2011 with an even larger contingent of Caribbean talent.”
Some of the participants of the CTWD Program: L-R Tony Hall, Michelle Materre, Rubadiri Victor, Mahmood Patel, Camilo Antonio, Che Rodriguez,  Louis Taylor, Hilary Brown, Dr Keith Nurse, Frances-Anne Solomon, Kirk Bucahannan CPTC, Davina Lee,  Ryan Singh, Alison Saunders, Cabral Trotman, Ava-Gail Gardiner, Escipion Olliveira, Rommel Hall, Sheldon Felix.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

International Launch of CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution was a Huge Success!

Ava Gail Gardiner, from Jamaica, representing the Caribbean Audio-visual Network (CAN) at the International Launch of CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution at the Harlem Underground Restaurant on Tuesday night.
Producer Lisa Harewood from Barbados is interviewed at the International Launch of CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution.

Staff of the Barbados Consulate, Toronto, in front of the CTWD Banner at our international launch.


Dr Keith Nurse, Chair of CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution, with a guest.

From left: Award-winning Canadian playwright Djanet Sears and Tonya Lee Williams, actress and Founder/President of the ReelWorld Film Festival, with LA-based producer/actor Marc Gomes.

TIFF Co-Director Cameron Bailey adresses the crowd and welcomes the CTWD delegation, flanked by Frances-Anne Solomon CTWD CEO, and Dr Keith Nurse CTWD Board Chair.


Cameron Bailey, TIFF Co-Director, with Tonya Lee Williams ReelWorld Founder/President and other guests at the International Launch of CTWD

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

CTWD Launch & Market Booklet

View the lineup for CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution's international launch, market incubator sessions, and projects that our participants have in development. Please download the official guide (pdf) to this landmark event, supporting Caribbean/Diaspora filmmakers, taking place this month in Toronto.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Caribbean Tales Worldwide Distribution Takes Outstanding Filmmakers to the International Marketplace.

CTWD Celebrates its International Launch by bringing 25 Top Producers to the Toronto International Film Festival .

Toronto – August 12, 2010


CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc, the first ever film distribution company of its kind in the English-speaking Caribbean, will bring twenty-five (25) top Caribbean producers and filmmakers to Toronto this fall, to take part in its unique Market Development Program and participate in the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival 2010.

Launched regionally in Barbados in May 2010 with the Vision Statement “Taking Caribbean Films to the World”, CTWD aims to be the “go to” solution for Caribbean filmmakers seeking to penetrate the international marketplace, and international buyers looking for quality Caribbean-themed content.

There is an explosion of content coming out of the Caribbean and a need for a focused distribution strategy to ensure that this gets the best deals on the international market.” said CEO and accomplshed award-winning Canadian-Trinidadian filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon.

Already the company boasts a distribution catalogue of over 50 films and television programs by some of the finest filmmakers from the Caribbean and its Diaspora.

The classy inaugural Catalogue will be unveiled in September when the company will host a Market Development Program for twenty-five (25) selected Caribbean producers, aimed at supporting the growth of a vibrant world-class Caribbean film and TV industry. This will include an intensive 3-day Market Incubator (September 6-9th), a Caribbean-themed Networking Launch Party on September 7th, and a Marketplace Brunch (September 13th).


Participants will hone their project proposals through intensive analyses and interventions with international consultants, that will prepare them to participate in the Toronto International Film Festival, where they will take advantage of many networking opportunities with Canadian and international partners and buyers.

More than fifty (50) producers applied to this year’s CTWD Market Development Program. The stellar list of final participants represents a Who’s Who of Caribbean filmmaking.

The United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) will fund the participation of 6 established regional producer, all of them recipients of the 2009 UNIDO Cinematic & Entrepreneurship Motivation Awards (CEMA). They are well-known producer/director Alison Saunders (Hit for Six) from Barbados, 
filmmakers Che Rodriguez, and Rubadiri Victor from Trinidad, Clement Richards from Dominica, St Lucian music video director Davina Lee, and L.A.-based Guyanese filmmaker and actor
 Marc Gomes.

UNIDO is also funding the participation of 4 outstanding producers selected for the exceptionally high quality of their submitted projects. They include celebrated Trinidadian writer /producer Tony Hall, accomplished Jamaican film and television director/producer Mary Wells, and Kirk Buchanan, Deputy CEO of the Creative Production & Training Centre Ltd & CTV Cable Channel.

Innovative Montreal-based Canadian animation company Toon Boom and UNIDO will jointly support the participation of award-winning animator Camille Selvon Abrahams from Trinidad and Tobago.

Invest Barbados will support five (5) established Barbadian producers : Penelope Hynam from Caribbean Island Film, Mahmood Patel (Bridgetown Film Festival/the Film Group), Cabral Trotman (Skylarc Pictures), Rommel Hall (Jesus Army Productions) and producer Lisa Harewood.

The Canada Council for the Arts is supporting five (5) accomplished independent Canadian filmmakers to participate in the CTWD Program: award-winning filmmaker Dawn Wilkinson, celebrity presenter and director/producer Sharon Lewis, NYU graduate Ian Harnarine, talented writer/director Louis Taylor, and prolific documentary maker Lana Lovell

Finally CTWD is proud to announce part-subsidies for attendance by three (3) Diaspora producers: Mariel Brown (The Solitary Alchemist), from Trinidad, and US-based directors Vashti Anderson (Jeffrey's Calypso), and Melisssa Gomez (Share and Share Alike).

The CTWD Market Incubator Program will be led by respected international consultants including NY-based Marketing and Distribution specialist Michelle Matterre, and Tanya Mudaly, who is Commissioning Editor for Drama at the South African Broadcasting Corporation. Their participation is made possible through grants from the Caribbean Export Development Agency, and the Commonwealth Foundation.

CTWD is founded by award-winning Canadian-Trinidadian producer/director Frances-Anne Solomon. Other principals of the company are economist and CTWD Board Chair Dr Keith Nurse who is also Director of the Shridath Ramphal Center at UWI’s Cave Hill Campus in Barbados; international media personality, producer and marketing specialist Lisa Wickham, and talented Jamaican-American producer/director Mary Wells.

CTWD is a member of the Barbados Business Enterprise Corporation that provides Seed and Venture Capital Services.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

The CaribbeanTales Annual Film Festival at Harbourfront’s Island Soul brings the best of Caribbean cinema to Toronto during Caribana weekend

Toronto – July 13, 2010

The CaribbeanTales Annual Film Festival has become a not-to-be-missed event on the Toronto City’s summer calendar. Now in its fifth year, the Festival is partnering with Harbourfront Centre’s Island Soul Festival to present some of the best Caribbean films made in recent years for audiences seeking another kind of entertainment over the Caribana weekend.

Tanya Mullings
Queens of Our Music:  On Sunday, August 1st, 2010, from 3 pm to 7 pm, the CaribbeanTales Film Festival presents an extraordinary and entertaining line-up of films called Queens of our Music – in celebration of Caribbean and Caribbean-Canadian Divas who have rocked the mic from Toronto to Havana, and back.

The afternoon kicks off with Music Is My life, an intimate portrait of the Canadian-born singer Tanya Mullings who has won the hearts of fans all across Canada and the Caribbean. The daughter of the late great Jamaican reggae music producer Karl Mullings, the film reflects on her art and on the influence of her famous father.

Macomere Fifi
Next up, at 3:35 pm, AKA Macomere Fifi charts the evolution of the award-winning Calypso Queen.  Previously known as Tara Woods, she rose from being a church chorister in her home island of Tobago to becoming the formidable award-winning and much loved monarch on Canada’s male-dominated Calypso scene

At 4 pm, Stepping Out, directed by Mars Horodyski, features Toronto-based singer Saidah Baba Talibah. The daughter of legendary Canadian jazz singer Salome Bey and the equally respected Kittitian music producer Howard Matthews, she is veritable Canadian music royalty.  Her extraordinary talent has allowed her to carve her own niche in this competitive contemporary market.

At 4:25 pm, Blood directed and produced by Cayman-based filmmaker Judy Singh features popular Canadian-Jamaican dub poet D'bi Young, with performances by the Cuban female Hip Hop Group Las Krudas. The film is part extraordinary music video (shot on locations around Havana, Cuba) and part entertaining after-dinner
Dbi.young.anitafrika
conversation between D’bi and her friends.

At 5:10 pm there will be a special presentation of Miss Lou-Then and Now, featuring the one and only Jamaican icon, Louise Bennett. Miss Lou was the country's leading author, poet, and comedienne.  She pioneered “Jamaica language” and took it to an artistic level that reflected the truth and essence of Jamaican life. The film captures private moments during the last year of her life when she shared her thoughts with her good friend, famous Jamaican actor Leonie Forbes.

Sunday afternoon will climax with a special screening of Queens of Sound - A Herstory of Reggae and Dancehall, directed by Austrian filmmaker Sandra Krampelhuber.  This is the first feature-length documentary to explore the long-neglected female side of reggae and dancehall music in Jamaica. The film follows three generations of women in the Jamaican music business as they recount their struggles for acceptance as well as their successes. Artists featured include Marcia Griffiths, Tanya Stephens, Sasha, Cecile, Chevelle Franklyn, Queen Ifrica, Macka Diamond and Lady Gene.

At 6:50 pm, the screening will be followed by an in-person Talk-Back session with special guest Tasha Rosez  - the reggae DJ, who will provide some insight into the issue of women in the music business.

Tribes by Ras Kassa
TRIBES by Ras Kassa: At 7:30 pm, Sunday evening’s presentation will be the Toronto premiere of Tribes, a brand new drama directed by Jamaica’s hottest music video director Ras Kassa (Welcome to Jamrock, The Mission). Set in Trinidad and Tobago, Tribes takes viewers on a rollercoaster of love and life.  It is the gripping story of Jamal, an undefeated stick-fighter and popular radio DJ, who finds that an unexpected twist in his personal life threatens to destroy everything.

Fresh New Voices and Visions in Caribbean Film and Television: On Monday, August 2nd, 2010, from 2:30pm to 5pm, CaribbeanTales presents Fresh New Voices and Visions in Caribbean Film and Television, featuring several Canadian premieres.

Directions, winner of the Best Short Film/Peopleʼs Choice Award at the 2008 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival satirizes the endearing and frustrating phenomenon of Trinidadians and their ability to give directions. The film pokes fun at the idea that when one asks a Trini for directions he’ll send you on a roundabout route guaranteed to get you hopelessly lost. In this short documentary a number of persons are asked to give directions to a well-known Port of Spain landmark with hilarious results.

Jimmel Daniel - Power of The Vagina

At 2:45 pm there will be the Canadian premiere of Trinidadian filmmaker Jimmel Daniel’s explosive short film The Power of the Vagina that takes audiences through a hilarious and entertaining look at sexual politics in Trinidad and Tobago.

Next up, at 3:10 pm, Trapped in an Elevator directed by Barbados’ highly talented filmmaker/producer Rommel Hall is a completely delightful Bajan musical opera featuring an ensemble cast.

Mutabaruka
Simply Muta:  Finally the evening’s highlight, at 3:30 pm will be with the international premiere of CVM's hit television show Simply Muta.  This entertaining tv show  stars the militant Rastafari poet/philosopher, Mutabaruka as host. The brutally frank 'barefoot Rasta', is one of Jamaica's best loved performers, and the program unapologetically gives voice to his unconventional opinions on a wide range of topics relevant to Jamaicans and the world.

WORKSHOPS

August 1, 1-4pm


CaribbeanTales presents An Introduction to Animation

Sponsored by Toon-Boom. 

Venue: The Brigantine Room

Computer animation is one of the most exciting applications spawned by the advent of computer technology. This hands-on course introduces participants to some basic concepts. Suitable for all ages.


August 2, 1-3pm : CaribbeanTales presents Digital film-making on a Shoestring Budget
This hands-on crash course introduces prospective young filmmakers to the basic elements needed to make a movie or television program with next to no budget.

The CaribbeanTales Annual Film Festival is founded by accomplished Toronto-based Trinidadian filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon, whose most recent award-winning feature film A Winter Tale has won international acclaim. She is the President and Artistic Director of the two companies she created: Leda Serene Films and CaribbeanTales.  Her recent projects include HeartBeat – a documentary series profiling Caribbean musical creators; Literature Alive, a many faceted multimedia project profiling Caribbean authors; and the Gemini-nominated Lord Have Mercy!  Canada’s landmark multicultural sitcom originally created for Vision TV, Toronto1, APTN and Showcase.

CaribbeanTales is Canada’s premier multimedia company that creates, markets and distributes educational films, videos, radio programs, audio books, theatre plays, websites and events, to showcase the rich heritage of the Caribbean Diaspora worldwide.

CaribbeanTales’ mandate is to foster and encourage intercultural understanding and citizen participation through the medium of film, contributing to an inclusive Canadian society.

The Island Soul Festival takes place between July 30th and August 2nd at Toronto’s Harbourfront and showcases Caribbean culture through music, food and art in a weekend-long celebration that bridges the gap between Canada and the Islands. 

Available for interviews:
Frances-Anne Solomon

For media inquiries please contact:
Pennant Media Group
Kevin Pennant  kp@pennantmediagroup.com 
Toronto 416.596.2978
Los Angeles 818.748.7517

Monday, July 12, 2010

Call for Proposals - CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Market Development Program, Toronto 2010

Dear Filmmakers,

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc
, in partnership with Caribbean Export, UNIDO, and with the support of the Canada Council for the Arts will facilitate a Market Development Program for selected Caribbean, Caribbean-Diasporic and Caribbean-Canadian independent filmmakers.

If you have a project in development that is market ready, and can benefit from the support of this program, then you are encouraged to apply. The deadline for applications is July 19th 2010.

CTWD is accepting open submissions from regional, Diasporic, and Caribbean-Canadian independent filmmakers, for which a number of bursaries are still available.

This will also be a great opportunity to network and meet and get to know filmmaking colleagues from the Caribbean region, Canada, and from around the world.

The package includes the following, as well as other benefits TBC:

* Attendance at 3 day CTWD INCUBATOR September 7-9th 2010(TM),
* Attendance at CTWD Networking Event/Launch Party
* Attendance at CTWD Marketplace including 1 on 1 meetings with buyers,
* Travel, Accomodation, per diem to Toronto, 6-14 September 2010
* TIFF Industry pass that will include participation in selected TIFF events
* Toronto Metro pass for 1 week

Your application should include the following: 

- A Cover letter detailing why you would like to participate in the Program.
- A 1 page pitch description of your project including the following: Synopsis, Key Cast/Crew, Budget, Financing Plan.

The final list of selected participants will be announced on July 31st.

Kind Regards,
Frances-Anne Solomon
Chief Executive Officer
CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc
http://CaribbeanTales-WorldWide.com


CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc, the region’s first film distribution company, was launched in Barbados in May 2010 with the vision statement “Taking Caribbean Films to the World”.

CTWD is having its international market launch in September 2010 in Toronto, during the renowned Toronto International Film Festival (September 9th-19th), where the company will host a series of activities aimed at supporting the growth of a vibrant world-class Caribbean film and TV industry, including a Launch/Networking Event, a 3-day Market Incubator for selected Caribbean, Diasporic and Caribbean-Canadian Producers, and a Marketplace, that will include 1 on 1 meetings with buyers attending TIFF.

CTWD is partnering with the U.N. Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), Caribbean Export and the Canada Council for the Arts to hold the First CaribbeanTales Film and Television Market Incubator scheduled to take place from September 7-9. Six recipients of the UNIDO-funded Cinematic Entrepreneurship Motivation Awards (CEMA) have already been confirmed to attend.

The CTWD Incubator will provide support to producers through specialized sessions led by international film professionals/consultants. The Market Incubator will include a market-simulation exercise to prepare participants for the "Marketplace" that will involve a speed-dating mode: private one-on-one meetings with buyers as well as informal networking opportunities for participants to pitch their projects.

The Toronto Int’l Film Festival is the world’s largest public festival and is North America’s premiere film festival. Huge audiences attend from Toronto’s 2.6 million population, and from across Canada, the USA and around the world. The famed Hollywood Film magazine, ‘Variety’, acknowledged that, “TIFF, is second only to Cannes in terms of high profile Press, Stars and Market activity.” Today, film festivals are ‘trade shows’ for film, tourism and branding a place, a region and company. TIFF generates some CA$67 million for the city of Toronto and nearly half of that, CA$33 million is made from tourism.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Pushing Region's Filmmakers

Frances-Anne Solomon (left), chief executive officer of CaribbeanTales, listening while company principal Lisa Wickham shares some of the company’s future plans. (Picture by Cherie Pitt.)


From The Nation, Barbados
Published on 5/20/2010.

BARBADOS IS SET to become the home of the first film distribution company in the English-speaking Caribbean. Last Wednesday, CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc. was launched to present Caribbean film-makers to the international community.

CaribbeanTales was established to ensure that film-makers in the Caribbean could effectively have their work marketed and distributed.

Independent film producers have no centralised channel through which to market content, and content buyers have no centralised entity from which to acquire content.

Frances-Anne Solomon, chief executive officer of CaribbeanTales, said: "There is an explosion of products coming out of the region and there is a need for a focused distribution strategy to ensure that this content gets the best deals on the international market."

Solomon emphasised the danger in not having avenues available for products indigenous to the Caribbean, where film review personnel might decide the work has no audience without taking time to invest in the product or understand the target market.

CaribbeanTales' chairman Dr Keith Nurse, who is also director of the Shridath Ramphal Centre at the Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies, said the biggest challenge was that throughout the Caribbean there was the generation of content but no outlets for getting this content into the markets.

Nurse said the creation of a company that could distribute Caribbean films was important, since film-makers currently relied on people outside of the region to distribute their work. This, he said, caused the money to stay outside of the region as the most money could be made through distribution and marketing. (LK)

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution is founded by accomplished international filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon, whose most recent award-winning feature film A Winter Tale, has won critical acclaim. Other principals include Dr Keith Nurse, Director of UWI's Shridath Ramphal Center at Cave Hill, well-known Trinidad-based Publicist, Producer, and Media Personality Lisa Wickham, and Jamaican filmmaker Mary Wells ("Kingston Paradise").


CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution is part of the Barbados Business Enterprise Corp.family which provides Shepherding and Seed & Venture Capital services.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Caribbean Film Distribution Company to be launched in Barbados

This month Barbados will become home to CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution: the first ever of its kind film distribution company in the English-speaking Caribbean aimed at creating moneymaking opportunities for producers of Caribbean content.

The company will be launched at a Press Conference in Bridgetown on May 19th 2010.

One of the many tangible outcomes of the recently concluded and highly acclaimed Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival held in Barbados earlier this year, CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution is being established to represent Caribbean Filmmakers to the international community.

It will also position Barbados as a "centre of excellence" for film in the region.

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution intends to acquire a broad-based catalogue of Caribbean-themed films from the Region and its Diaspora, and to market these products through its Festivals and other international markets such as Cannes and Mipcom as well as at trade fairs, missions and conferences.

According to CEO and renowned Filmmaker Frances-Anne Solomon, “there is an explosion of product coming out of the region and there is a need for a focused distribution strategy to ensure that this content gets the best deals on the international market.”

“Other companies exist around the world, but Caribbean cinema has its own aesthetic, which unfortunately is marginal to such entities. We wanted to create something that will take care of our own.” Says Solomon.

Solomon believes that the Caribbean is a reservoir of stories that will appeal to a wide cross-section of people because of the diversity that exists in the Region.

“In fact our literature is a testament to the wealth of material there is to mine.” She says.


CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution is in the process of acquiring content from filmmakers and will showcase its inaugural Catalogue at the annual Caribbean Studies Association Conference that this year will be held in Barbados May 24 – 28, 2010.

CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution is founded by Solomon, herself an accomplished international filmmaker. Other principals include Dr Keith Nurse, Director of UWI's Shridath Ramphal Center at Cave Hill, well-known Trinidadian Producer, Director and Media Personality Lisa Wickham and Jamaican filmmaker Mary Wells ("Kingston Paradise").


CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution Inc is a proud partner of the Barbados Business Enterprise Corp. a company formed by Dr Basil  Springer, that  provides Shepherding and Seed & Venture Capital services to businesses.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

MEDIA ADVISORY - CARIBBEAN RECEPTION TO LAUNCH BEST OF CARIBBEANTALES AT NYU


MEDIA ADVISORY

CARIBBEAN RECEPTION TO CELEBRATE THE LAUNCH OF THE BEST OF CARIBBEANTALES FILM FESTIVAL
AT NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

WHO:
Celebrated Caribbean poet, historian and cultural critic Dr. Kamau Brathwaite; and Frances-Anne Solomon, accomplished filmmaker and founder of The Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival.

WHAT:
A reception hosted by Dr. Kamau Brathwaite to celebrate the launch of a week of film screenings selected from The Best of CaribbeanTales Film Festival, at New York University.

WHEN:
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Starts at 5.30 p.m.

WHERE:
The Institute of African American Affairs at New York University - 41 East 11th Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10003

WHY:
With a growing international awareness of the Caribbean's burgeoning media industry, The CaribbeanTales Film Festival aims to entertain and educate through screenings and talk back sessions that spotlight exciting new trends in film and television from the Caribbean and its Diaspora.

Government officials from the Caribbean and New York City in attendance.
Caribbean cultural talent to perform.

Contact:
Bevan Springer, Marketplace Excellence + 1 201 861-2056
Frances-Anne Solomon, CaribbeanTales + 1 347 594-2798

Links:
Press Release: Kamau Brathwaite Presents Best of CaribbeanTales at NYU
CaribbeanTales Comes to NYU, Cannes - Jamaica Gleaner
Region's Literary Giants Throw Weight Behind Caribbean Film - Truly Golden Media

Monday, April 19, 2010

CaribbeanTales goes to NYU, Cannes

by Mel Cooke, Gleaner Writer - Jamaica

Over a year ago Frances-Anne Solomon received an e-mail from cultural icon Dr Kamau Brathwaite, congratulating and thanking her for her contribution to Caribbean film through the annual CaribbeanTales Film Festival, held in Toronto, Canada, each July.

As the festival extended back to its roots this year, with the Best of CaribbeanTales debuting in Barbados in February, Brathwaite planned to take students from New York University (NYU). That fell through, but Brathwaite was determined to make the connection and Solomon says "he began looking into the possibility of bringing the festival itself to NYU."

Frances-Anne Solomon - Contributed
"Through his persistent efforts, the plan bore fruit, and was confirmed a few days ago. The NYU festival is therefore due to the foresight and vision of Kamau Brathwaite, who is an icon of our culture, and clearly sees the cultural importance and educational significance of the development of an indigenous film industry."

She says Brathwaite chose and programmed the films himself. "He knew exactly what he wanted to show, when and how," Solomon said.

Therefore Brathwaite, who is Professor of Comparative Literature at NYU, will host selections from the Best of CaribbeanTales 2010 from April 26th to May 1. The mini-festival is part of a larger event, Marassa 10 2010: A Festival of Caribbean Film, Story and Imagination.

Best of CaribbeanTales
Six feature films and several shorts from the Best of CaribbeanTales will be screened. Among them are Stephanie's Black's Africa Unite, Calypso Dreams (Geoffrey Dunn, Michael Horne), A Winter Tale (directed by Solomon), the shorts Directions, Invisible and Mami Wata from Trinidad and Tobago, directed by Renee Polonais, Elspeth Duncan and Yao Ramesar respectively.

There are also the Maria Govan directed Rain, The Legend of Buchi Fil (German Gruber), Christopher Laird's Drummit2Summit and the closing feature Carmen and Geoffrey (Linda Atkins and Nick Doob).

"I am very excited to see giants of our literature - Brathwaite, Derek Walcott, George Lamming (who spoke at our launch in Barbados), to name a few - prepared to engage and throw their weight behind our new fledgeling film industry. It is very helpful, as it establishes a context for the work we are doing; they see its vast possibilities and their support gives our work a weight and legitimacy beyond mere 'entertainment'," Solomon said.

CaribbeanTales will also be involved in the  Festival International du Film Panafricain  from April 21 - 25 2010 in Cannes, France, Solomon receiving the personal honour of being invited as 'Presidente du Jury' (President of the Jury). Among the films slated to be screened are Roger McTair's Journey to justice, Fabulous Spaces, (which explores science fiction writer Nalo Hopkinson's work), Blood Dub and the Matriarch (Judy Singh's biopic of dub artist dbi.young.anitaafrika), Jab  (Alex Deverteiul ) Gathering the Scattered Cousins  (Akin Omotoso); Frances-Anne Solomon's What My Mother Told Me and I Is A Long Memoried Woman; Celebration (Yao Ramesar); Crack House (Camille Selvon Abrahams); and Lenny Little White's Glory to Gloriana.

The inclusion has been long in the making. Solomon said "I was approached two years ago by Mr Basile Ngangue, the Artistic Director of the Festival International Pan African de Cannes. This is a festival that takes place in Cannes, France, between MipTV in April and the Cannes Film Festival in May. Mr Ngangue came to Canada a couple of times, and last year we were able to meet in Toronto. He expressed an interest in including Caribbean films in his programs and invited me to participate, so I gave him a selection of some 30 films to take back with him back to France."

Exposure
A selection committee gave the nod to 20 of the films which Solomon recommended.
The implications of the NYU and Cannes forays go beyond achievement for CaribbeanTales. Solomon says "Caribbean culture, including film, is taking its place on the world stage, alongside other major cultures. The exposure legitimises our very being, our very existence as a people and a region, with not one but many original voices. The ability to have a voice, to tell our stories, is key to a healthy society. So we are growing as a region, we are coming to voice, coming into our own."

"Wherever there are populations of Caribbean people there is a thirst to see Caribbean stories. The explosion of exciting films and festivals like ours has generated great interest. It makes sense that the CaribbeanTales Film Festival, which began as a festival of films from the Caribbean and its Diaspora - originating in Toronto - would travel the world effortlessly."

On the strictly business end, Solomon says that CaribbeanTales Worldwide Distribution will be launched in May, this in association with BBEC, a Barbados-based investment company led by Dr Basil Springer.

"Effective and targeted distribution of our content is very much needed, to give us a platform in the world marketplace, to find our audiences and meet audience with product. Right now a lot of content is being created but there are no outlets. The infrastructure to monetise the work of creators does not exist. We have to change that. A distribution company will be the first step to putting the production of films on a proper business footing by identifying and targeting markets and generating income for producers," Solomon said.

"It is an exciting time and I feel very privileged to be part of it."