Philippine Daily Inquirer

Just shoot it: Youth urged to join MMFF tilt

- By Bayani San Diego Jr.

STUDENTS are very much welcome to join the Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF), through the Student Short Film Competitio­n, which started last year.

And to attract more young people, the MMFF has cooked up an additional tilt— the first Cine- Phone Film Festival. Organizers are challengin­g high school and college students to make threeminut­e movies using cell phone cameras.

Francis Tolentino, chair of the Metropolit­an Manila Devel- opment Authority (MMDA, which spearheads the fest), said it was important to hear the youth’s ideas.

“They are the future of cinema,” Tolentino said.

Mobile and digital technologi­es will be the youth’s allies in this endeavor.

Ramon Isberto, head of public affairs of Smart, one of the tilt sponsors, related that the telecommun­ications giant mounted a similar contest seven years ago.

“Since then, technology has vastly improved,” Isberto not-

ed. “Today, you can shoot high-definition videos with high-end cell phones.”

One obstacle

Technology is ripe for a contest like Cine-Phone, he said. The only obstacle he sees is sound engineerin­g.

“You can solve this by editing on a separate computer using Final Cut or Premiere,” said filmmaker Paul Soriano, head of the Student sections.

Soriano said the youth are lucky because competitio­ns like this allow them to hone their filmmaking talents at an early age. “How I wish there had been contests like this when I was in high school,” he said.

Students from around Metro Manila attended the recent launch of the Student sections at the De La Salle-College of St. Benilde.

Soriano said he was set to fly to Cebu and Davao to meet with students there.

“I still consider myself a student,” he said. “I learn from the veterans I interact with, and I am excited to learn from the studentfil­mmakers, too.”

Soriano is eyeing 20 finalists each from Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. The list will then be narrowed down to 10 high school and 10 college students.

The Cine-Phone section has “Road Courtesy” as theme. The Shorts tilt gives participan­ts free rein in terms of subject matter. Maximum running time for the shorts is 20 minutes.

The six winners in the Cine-Phone section will get P25,000 each—along with camera phones, Internet broadband kits and cell phone load (from Smart), digital cameras (from Sony) and postproduc­tion packages (from TEN 17P and Abracadabr­a).

The best film in the Shorts section will receive P50,000; the jury prize winner, P25,000. Also at stake are camera phones, digital cameras and postproduc­tion packages, one-year paid internship with Viva Entertainm­ent and a filmmaking workshop from Mowelfund.

“This will be their stepping stone to becoming fullfledge­d members of the film industry,” said Soriano.

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