FRED Film Radio - English Channel

The Market Insider: “Atonement”, interview with Dallas Film Commissioner, Katie Schuck

14 min · 18. Mai 2026
Episode The Market Insider: “Atonement”, interview with Dallas Film Commissioner, Katie Schuck Cover

Beschreibung

The Market Insider [https://www.fred.fm/festival/cinemavideo-international/] is an industry-focused podcast by FRED Film Radio in collaboration with Cinema & Video International [https://www.fred.fm/the-market-insider/], recorded during the 79th Cannes Film Festival. The series explores the business and strategic dynamics of the international film and audiovisual sector through in-depth conversations with producers, distributors, sales agents, film commissioners, and industry experts. Each episode provides valuable insights into market trends, challenges, and innovations, offering professionals and enthusiasts a comprehensive understanding of today’s global film industry FRED The Makret Insider met Katie Schuck, Dallas Film Commissioner, during the Cannes Film Festival – Marché Du Film 2026 ahead of the premiere of the film “Atonement” by Reed Van Dyk. “Atonement” was one of the few American titles selected this year. The film premieres in the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs on May 15th. Reed Van Dyk is a Los Angeles-based director whose previous short film received an Academy Award nomination. Atonement was shot in Dallas, Texas, with additional filming in Jordan. * “Atonement” in the Cannes 2026 selection * Dallas as a production destination * The shooting locations involved in the film * What does the city offers to independent filmmakers in terms of locations, facilities, and creative ecosystem * What kind of productions are currently looking at Dallas as a shooting destination * How Texas incentive system evolved in recent years and its global competiteveness  * How can film commissions help foster the growth of the independent industry today * Does festival exposure directly influence future productions FRED – The Market Insider is a podcast created in collaboration with Cinema & Video International. ATONEMENT (L’APAISEMENT) BY REED VAN DYK Quinzaine 2026 | Feature film | 118 min Film in competition for the Caméra d’Or Award | World premiere In the early days of the Iraq War, a U.S. Marine’s split-second decision during a firefight devastates an Iraqi family. Years later, aided by a New Yorker journalist, he seeks to reconcile with the woman and her family who survived. “Atonement” is inspired by true events. ATONEMENT by Reed VAN DYCK ©GuillaumeLutz-SD [https://fredfmstatic.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/55273270851_68ddb5c3a4_c-1-770x513.jpg]ATONEMENT by Reed VAN DYCK ©GuillaumeLutz-SD The post The Market Insider: “Atonement”, interview with Dallas Film Commissioner, Katie Schuck [https://www.fred.fm/atonement/] appeared first on Fred Film Radio [https://www.fred.fm].

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der FRED Film Radio - English Channel-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

511 Folgen

Episode “Other side of fame”, interview with director Erik Bernard and actress Sveva Alviti Cover

“Other side of fame”, interview with director Erik Bernard and actress Sveva Alviti

Presented as a world premiere at the ninth edition of Filming Italy Sardegna Festival 2026 [https://www.filmingitalysardegnafestival.it/en], “Other Side of Fame” is directed by Erik Bernard and stars Sveva Alviti in the role of Rachel, a young woman whose life changes during the Cannes Film Festival after a romantic encounter with an elusive American forces her to choose between the allure of fame and the promise of real love. The film arrives at the festival with the Women Power Award going to Sveva Alviti, in recognition of a career built around giving voice to women’s stories. A FILM ABOUT THE CHOICES WE HOPE TO HAVE THE COURAGE TO MAKE For Erik Bernard, “Other Side of Fame” was born out of conversations he had in Cannes with aspiring actors navigating the risks and consequences of chasing a career in the spotlight. “It is about a woman who makes a hard choice and has to find her way back to where she started, and in the middle of all that, the hardest choice is love.” From that starting point, the story grew around a question that feels particularly relevant today: what does it mean to want to be famous, and can fame and love ever truly coexist? AN INSTAGRAM MESSAGE THAT BECAME A FILM The collaboration between Erik Bernard and Alviti started in an unexpected way. His publicist, who had previously worked with Sveva Alviti on “Dalida” [https://www.fred.fm/sveva-alviti-madrina-della-81-mostra-internazionale-di-arte-cinematografica-di-venezia/], suggested her name when Erik Bernard was looking for a European actress fluent in French. He reached out to her on Instagram, not the most conventional of beginnings. “Usually, when you have this kind of connection on Instagram, it’s not real”, Sveva Alviti admits, “but I gave him a chance because what he wrote was very deep.” After reading the script in two hours, she knew she wanted to do it. Erik Bernard, for his part, quickly discovered she would bring “value and depth to the character” that went well beyond what he had imagined. A STUBBORN, STRONG AND SOMETIMES FRAGILE WOMAN What drew Sveva Alviti to Rachel was the complexity of the role and the weight of its message. “There is a message about the power men can have and how they play with your dreams.” Rachel, she explains, shares something with Sveva Alviti herself: stubbornness, strength, and moments of fragility. The character goes through a great deal before finding her moment, and that journey, for Alviti, is what makes the story worth telling. Every role she chooses, she says, comes with a purpose: “I want to communicate something that stays.” THE WOMEN POWER AWARD AND A CAREER BUILT AROUND WOMEN’S VOICES Receiving the Women Power Award on the same night as the world premiere of “Other Side of Fame” felt to Sveva Alviti like a natural alignment. “I always choose characters where I can give voice to women or stories that don’t have one.” Beyond acting, she is now also directing her own documentaries about women, a path that Tiziana Rocca [https://www.fred.fm/tiziana-rocca-intervista-alla-general-director-del-9-filming-italy-sardegna-festival/] recognized and wanted to celebrate, honoring not just the film but the vision behind an entire career. The post “Other side of fame”, interview with director Erik Bernard and actress Sveva Alviti [https://www.fred.fm/other-side-of-fame-interview-with-director-erik-bernard-and-actress-sveva-alviti/] appeared first on Fred Film Radio [https://www.fred.fm].

29. Juni 20266 min
Episode Interview with filmmaker Charlie Shackleton at Documenta Madrid 2026 Cover

Interview with filmmaker Charlie Shackleton at Documenta Madrid 2026

This interview explores the creative journey behind some of Charlie Shackleton‘s most acclaimed works and offers invaluable insights into the art of storytelling, with a twist. What happens when you create new works from existing footage or when things don’t go according to plan? We talk to the winner of the NEXT Innovation Award at last year’s Sundance, while in Spain for a retrospective of his work as part of this year’s Documenta Madrid [https://www.documentamadrid.com/en]. THE ART OF RE-TELLING STORIES Charlie Shackleton’s work is characterised by a deliberate exploration of form and content. Whether creating a film that exists as a single 35-millimetre print by constructing an intricate collage of archival footage or a documentary based on a failed film project, his work challenges traditional cinematic boundaries. In this interview, he emphasises the importance of fragility and impermanence, characteristics that add a poetic layer to his creations. This innovative mindset turns each film into a reflection on mortality, time, and memory, inviting viewers to reconsider the meanings of cinema. AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO FILMMAKING Charlie Shackleton‘s approach often involves working within constraints, which paradoxically fuels creative innovation. For example, “The Afterlight” (2021), one of the films shown at Documenta Madrid, exists as a single 35mm print that deteriorates with each screening, inevitably leading to its eventual disappearance. This emphasises the fleeting nature of existence and of the art object, making every viewing a unique experience. This dedication to experimentation cements his reputation as a visionary in contemporary filmmaking. This feature-length experimental film is a collage composed of hundreds of fragments from early 20th-century fiction films from around the world. The piece delves into the archival and fragile nature of film history, highlighting the importance of preservation and the passage of time. WHEN A FAILED FICTION FILM PROJECT BECOMES A DOCUMENTARY Another notable film selected for Documenta Madrid this year is “Zodiac Killer Project” (2025).  When Charlie Shackleton found out that the true-crime documentary film he had been working on for years would never be made because clearing the rights to the book it was based on was impossible, he was frustrated but decided to make a documentary about his experience instead.  Consisting of a series of long takes on would-be film locations, fragments from various true-crime TV series, Charlie Shackleton‘s voiceover (and some behind-the-scenes footage), the film is a humorous account of the process of making a true-crime documentary that ultimately never materialised. By blending elements of documentary and video essay, the film critiques genre conventions while maintaining a personal and reflective tone. Another example of how his work consistently pushes the boundaries between traditional filmmaking and experimental media, showcasing their versatility and depth as a filmmaker. The post Interview with filmmaker Charlie Shackleton at Documenta Madrid 2026 [https://www.fred.fm/documenta-madrid-2026-interview-with-filmmaker-charlie-shakleton/] appeared first on Fred Film Radio [https://www.fred.fm].

30. Mai 202612 min
Episode “Ulysse”, an interview with director Laetitia Masson and actress Élodie Bouchez Cover

“Ulysse”, an interview with director Laetitia Masson and actress Élodie Bouchez

Seasoned French director Laetitia Masson is back in the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival 2026– she was already selected in that strand back in 1998 with her second feature film, “For Sale” – with an extremely personal film, “Ulysse”, which follows the trajectory of Alice (Élodie Bouchez), a mum whose son Ulysse has a genetic condition which will inevitably alter his capacities and possibilities in life, but doesn’t entirely preclude a certain degree of autonomy, with the dedicated help of his parents. It is this hope which carries Alice through the endless round of  visits with many different therapists, special schools, or institutions we see her power through over nearly twenty years, driven by her motherly love, when even her pianist husband (Stanislas Merhar) has taken some distance (the length of a whole ocean, to be more specific). We met with the director and her main actress to discuss the very special endeavour that was making this film, also starring her own son Alphonse Roberts as the eldest Ulysse. LAETITIA MASSON ON TURNING HER OWN STORY INTO A FILM “Because this is my story, I didn’t have to do research, as it usually goes. So I had all this life experience, but the question was how to make a real film from it, not just to tell your story or complain or whatever. I hate films which just tell the real story and that’s all : that doesn’t make a good film. I had to see where the cinema was in the story, and I thought the cinema was there because it is all a question of the look you have upon things, upon human beings, and when you change the look, you change life.” ON THE MOTHER’S JOURNEY AS A CRUSADE, AND HER AS A FIGHTER AND A TRANSLATOR “For this movie, I thought it was important to present it as a crusade because I didn’t want to just tell my small story. I wanted to tell a tale that could reflect all destinies, so I wanted to show a learning journey, something you have to go through until you see the light.’ Although Masson sees her character as fighting for more than her own child, and thought of Erin Brockovich as a reference, she also says, ‘she’s not a fighter in the end, she’s just the translator of her child. As a movie, it’s the story of the child, but you can only read it through the mother, because of the singularity of that child. She’s the one you can understand everything through.” ON CHOOSING ÉLODIE BOUCHEZ FOR THE ROLE OF ALICE “As soon as I knew she was going to be the mother, it meant I wouldn’t have to do that part of the work. I knew I could completely trust her, and for me it was essential, because I was able to focus on the children.” ACTRESS ÉLODIE BOUCHEZ ON WORKING WITH DIFFERENT CHILDREN OF DIFFERENT AGES “It’s not easy to work with children, but it was also touching, and not only that, it was also inspiring, even though sometimes it was difficult because we were trying so hard, with some of them, to have them do the things that had to be done for the needs of the scene, so for me, it was like a dance, because I had to be inside, outside, inside, outside, so sometimes I was getting frustrated, because I wasn’t sure I gave my best, because I wasn’t focused on myself, but at the same time it was a good lesson because I was really in the present moment. […] I really let myself float with each of them, even the tiny one, so it was a one-of-a-kind experience, that’s for sure.” The post “Ulysse”, an interview with director Laetitia Masson and actress Élodie Bouchez [https://www.fred.fm/ulysse-an-interview-with-director-laetitia-masson-and-actress-elodie-bouchez/] appeared first on Fred Film Radio [https://www.fred.fm].

30. Mai 202616 min
Episode “Orange-Flavoured Wedding”, an interview with actress Adèle Exarchopoulos Cover

“Orange-Flavoured Wedding”, an interview with actress Adèle Exarchopoulos

Cannes loves Adèle Exarchopoulos; that’s no secret. Ever since the seminal moment that was the Palme d’Or she received in 2013, alongside Abdellatif Kechiche and her colleague and friend Léa Seydoux, for “Blue Is the Warmest Colour”, the French actress has climbed the famous steps of the Palais des Festivals almost every year. At this 79th Cannes Film Festival 2026, she’s there with two films: the Competition entry “Another Day” by Jeanne Herry, in which she plays the title role, and Christophe Honoré’s new ensemble gem, “Orange-Flavoured Wedding”, screened in the Cannes Première section. In this film, set in Nantes in 1978, the filmmaker directly evokes his maternal family (reprising the characters — now played by other actors, such as Paul Kircher, Vincent Lacoste, Nadia Tereszkiewicz, Alban Lenoir and Malou Khebizi —  from an autobiographical play staged in 2021, Le Ciel de Nantes) as he orchestrates the tumultuous, boozy wedding of one of the children of a large clan that includes the hypersensitive, semi-depressive Claudie, one of the groom’s sisters — the part which was entrusted to Exarchopoulos. The actress says she naturally found a fine chemistry with the other performers during prep and on those Paris–Nantes train rides. ON THIS FIRST COLLABORATION WITH CHRISTOPHE HONORÉ “I obviously knew Christophe Honoré’s cinema very well, but the screenplay felt a lot like a stage play. There was something almost hard to stomach about it, it was full of very lengthy stage directions, no dialogues. The themes addressed it in were clear, but you could tell there would be lots of room left for improvisation, so I called Vincent Lacoste, who’s a friend […], and he said, “Do it, follow me! He’s a great director!” And that was confirmed straight away — I wasn’t disappointed in the slightest!” ON HER CHARACTER’S DEPRESSIVE STATUS, THE WAY WOMEN USED TO BE AND STILL ARE TREATED, AND VIOLENCE WITHIN THE FAMILY “I don’t think her depression comes from somewhere specific. She’s just one of those women whose freedom and desire were too much for the era, and who were immediately deemed dangerous to society […], so it was fairly easy for me to identify with her. […] Ultimately, the film’s subject is trauma: this whole family was abused, and this whole family is in the process of repeating the same pattern and abusing others — be it their wives, their children, their sisters… In the 70s, domestic violence was completely normalised, and so was violence against women, and today we’re barely at the dawn of a real reckoning with mental health, women’s mental load, their place in the home, violence within the family unit. It’s starting to evolve a little, but I think there are still big actions pending that ought to be more political and institutional.” A SOFT SPOT FOR SUPPORTING ROLES “I love supporting roles. Of course, I love leads too, but I find there’s a freedom and a need for boldness in supporting parts – I’m thinking of “Mandibles” in particular.. As a viewer, too: I have big, deep-seated memories of supporting characters that truly moved me. […] It’s a bit like in life, supporting roles: they’re people who pass through, but you never forget them.”   The post “Orange-Flavoured Wedding”, an interview with actress Adèle Exarchopoulos [https://www.fred.fm/orange-flavoured-wedding-an-interview-with-actress-adele-exarchopoulos/] appeared first on Fred Film Radio [https://www.fred.fm].

29. Mai 20269 min
Episode Sydney Film Festival, interview with festival director Nashen Moodley Cover

Sydney Film Festival, interview with festival director Nashen Moodley

A CELEBRATION OF GLOBAL CINEMA EXCELLENCE Sydney Film Festival Director Nashen Moodley presents the line up of the 73rd edition of the festival [https://www.sff.org.au/], a long-standing platform for both emerging and established filmmakers, that will showcase over 250 films from more than 81 countries. As one of Australia’s most anticipated cultural events, it offers cinephiles a unique glimpse into the year’s most compelling films in an inclusive and dynamic environment, highlighting innovative narratives, bold cinematic voices and the vibrancy and diversity of contemporary filmmaking. The Sydney Film Festival has become a cornerstone of Australia’s cultural calendar, drawing audiences eager to explore innovative stories from around the world. This year’s edition features 20+ world premieres, numerous Australian premieres, and films that push the boundaries of traditional storytelling. Its flexible programming goes beyond conventional festival formats by adding films right up to the opening day, creating an element of surprise and excitement for the audience. A COMMITMENT TO ARTISTIC EXPRESSION AND INCLUSION “TO REMAIN VIGILANT ABOUT OUR OWN RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS”, FESTIVAL DIRECTOR NASHEN MOODLEY The Sydney Film Festival embraces the vital role of cinema in reflecting societal issues and fostering dialogue. The festival’s opening film, “Silenced,” directed by Selena Miles, exemplifies this approach by addressing themes of human rights and activism that resonate deeply in today’s political climate. Additionally, its “Europe Voices of Women in Film” section continues to promote gender parity by spotlighting talented female and gender queer directors from across Europe. This focus underscores the festival’s dedication to supporting diverse voices and encouraging films that challenge norms and inspire change. Throug the work of its director Nashen Moodley [https://www.fred.fm/nashen-moodley-festival-director-sydfilmfest-2/] and his team, Sydney Film Festival remains a vital showcase for pioneering cinema that combines artistic daring with social relevance. Its commitment to present bold, innovative, and inclusive films cements its role as a leading festival within the global film community. Audience can expect a rich program that not only entertains but also educates and provokes thought, reaffirming the festival’s status as a key event for lovers of passionate and courageous cinema worldwide.   The post Sydney Film Festival, interview with festival director Nashen Moodley [https://www.fred.fm/sydney-film-festival-interview-with-festival-director-nashen-moodley/] appeared first on Fred Film Radio [https://www.fred.fm].

29. Mai 202617 min