Kino (movement)

Kino is a film-making movement that advocates the production of short-films on little to no budget, using small crews, and non-competitive collaboration. There are Kino Groups around the world. Kino is divided into individual cells, or chapters, most of which have a monthly screening where member directors and guests can screen their films. Cells may also feature "Kino Kabarets", where members of the public are invited to collaborate and create films.[1]

History

The Kino movement was founded in 1999 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada[2] by Christian Laurence and friends. It has since spread worldwide (mostly in French-speaking countries and central Europe), and is now composed of over 70 physical cells, as well as many Facebook groups.

gollark: Use wireless components.
gollark: The CC community's OS obsession is unhealthy.
gollark: Milo's not an OS, it's an opus component.
gollark: Oh, right, most people use mIlo.
gollark: Keeping track of stuff would involve, say, a clipboard, or todo list.

References

  1. Finnan, Sean (March 13, 2019). "A Cell of Film-makers Meets Up to Create Movies, Fast". Dublin Inquirer. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  2. Rose, Alex (February 8, 2019). "Montreal short film collective Kino marks its 20th anniversary with events". Cult MTL. Retrieved 12 April 2019.


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