Female Film Crush

Female Film Crush | Angela Barnhardt Thomas

One of the many people I got to spend time with at TIFF 2015 this year was a woman named Angela Barnhardt Thomas.

Angela Barnhardt Thomas and Me at TIFF 2015

She is the producer of Waiting for Mamu (2013), a doc that travelled world wide to raise money for Mamu's school.

Social issues docs have the power to educate, demystify, and bring awareness to an otherwise ignorant viewer. This doc has since successfully raised over 1 million dollars.

BUY HERE.

This is the power of cinema! And it is achievable when hard working / passionate people like Angela are a part of the team. 

Being fairly new to the industry and using TIFF as a platform to meet with established film professionals, I was blown away at how approachable and knowledgable Angela was. Not only did she patiently answer all my questions, but she even made script suggestions and helped me understand the industry better.

It was a true pleasure attending TIFF programming with her and we were able to discuss a variety of topics on break. Angela and I also talked about her current project, a doc about Charles James, and I am so thrilled to see that subject bloom into a feature length video.

Click HERE for more info from the MET exhibit from 2014.

Sometimes it is about these chance meetings in life that really provide us the support and inspiration we need to be successful. And it is the people we surround ourselves with that help us define who we are and where we are headed.

I am happy to call Angela a friend and look forward to future meetings together. NYC here I come!

- Jenn

Women in Post Panel | CCE & DGC & CFC at The Gladstone Hotel

This past Thursday I attended a panel discussion at The Gladstone Hotel. Hosted by the CCE, with the DGC and CFC as friendly supporters, this event invited five talented women on stage for a discussion about women in post-production roles. Here is the panel

Sandy Pereira (assistant editor, editor, Toronto)

  • Works with David Cronenberg

Gillian Truster (editor, Toronto)

  • Degrassi | The Next Generation (TV), Orphan Black (TV)

Michele Hozer (editor, producer, director, Toronto)

  • edited over 50 docs, Hot Docs premiere of Sugar Coated (2015)

Susan Shipton (editor, Toronto)

Jane Tattersall (sound designer, Toronto)

  • won over 60 awards for sound design
  • works with Deepa Mehta
  • Vikings (TV)

The moderator for the evening, Marla, has 20 years experience in the industry. She is a passionate woman who lead an interesting and evoking conversation about success in the post-production world.

"If you want to get something different, you have to do something different" - Marla

Each women in the panel came from a different background, but agreed on several topics of interest. The first was that early on in your career, there is a large amount of luck that plays into knowing people and having the confidence to put yourself forward for work.

"Getting a job is a campaign" - laughed Gillian.

She waited two months to hear back from Temple Street Productions before she was asked to be an editor on Orphan Black.

Sandy discussed the merits of starting at the bottom. Most of the women in the panel created short films in school and PA'd on set before they settled into their role. All agreed how important mentorship is and how difficult it is sometimes as a women to find someone who "hires" women. Gillian finds this very backwards as she believes the greater the diversity in the editing room, therefore the better the work. 

"I hate wasted potential" - Gillian

No one should be judged for their gender, age, sexual orientation, or culture.

"I hate wasted potential" - Gillian.

Susan was adamant that people should be judged based on their skill and to refrain from marketing yourself as a good "female" editor. You are an editor. As soon as we point out our gender, it is easier for the world to point it out too.

"Work hard, be creative, smart, and you will overcome obstacles" - Susan.

Marla brought up some alarming stats in Canada, wherein 17% of the film industry are female editors, 4% cinematographers, and 25% producers. Yet women make up 50% of the population.

Another point of discussion was surround assistant editing vs. editing. Everyone was quick to agree that assistant editors play an ENORMOUS role in the editing room. Michele particularly said she always has an assistant editor helping her edit the docs. You can't do it by yourself. You need a team to bounce ideas off of to create a fluid and organic storyline. Question each other and the storyline to strengthen it.

"a documentary editor is the filmmaker in the editing room" - Michele.

Editors in the DOC industry have greater creative input.

The conversation ended by talking about possible ways to get more women involved in post. Jane mentioned that when the industry switched over to digital, more young males who were computer savvy jumped on board, leaving women far behind and not trained for the new landscape. Jane regrets that she knows so few women sound designers and mixers. 

Women in Post | CCE | The Gladstone Hotel | Toronto | 2015

Women in Post | CCE | The Gladstone Hotel | Toronto | 2015

Michele and Gillian both suggested that you make obstacles work for you. If you are interested in having a family, but are worried about the hours and time commitments post-production requires, you confidently set your hours with the producer. Explain why you need to be home between 5-8 every night and that you are willing to return to the editing room after you have settled with your family. This creates a standard system that others can understand and makes your life, career, and family happy by eliminating stress of always missing out on the personal side of life.

"What people really want from an editor is a point of view" - Sandy.
"No one will take your career as seriously as you will. [Prove your] tenacity and staying power" - Gillian.

If there are more women in higher positions, then more women feel confident applying to positions underneath and more women are inevitably hired. It is a cycle that needs to be standardized without making it obvious that it is a gender thing. All people deserve equal opportunity.

Michele ended the discussion powerfully by saying, "talk loudly. Take our space" as creators and post production experts in the film industry.

Truly a passionate and inspiring discussion! 

Back to the cutting room for me,

- Jenn