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
- Finnan, Sean (March 13, 2019). "A Cell of Film-makers Meets Up to Create Movies, Fast". Dublin Inquirer. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
- Rose, Alex (February 8, 2019). "Montreal short film collective Kino marks its 20th anniversary with events". Cult MTL. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
External links
- Kino Platform (Multilingual)
- Official website & event calendar(French & English)
- Kino on Archive.org
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